Assistant Professor Colorado State University Fort Collins, Colorado, United States
Overview: An increasingly aging prison population is often paired with multifaceted challenges with delivering humane health care. To alleviate these barriers, compassionate release policies aim to grant eligible inmates the opportunity to die in their community. This literature review discovered policy-related barriers, signifying the underuse of this vital approach to decarceration.Proposal text:
Background: The absence of uniform and appropriate policies to address suitable interventions at the end-of-life has aggravated the challenges and issues facing healthcare systems within a correctional facility. Despite the existence of compassionate release policies, only 4% of requests to the Federal Bureau of Prisons are granted, with evidence demonstrating similarly low rates among numerous state prison systems, signifying the underuse of these procedures as a vital approach to decarceration.
Methods: The purpose of this study was to systematically review literature to investigate trends in compassionate release policies, facility implementation, barriers at both the incarcerated individual and institutional levels, as well as gaps in the literature. A systematic review was completed using PRISMA guidelines. CAB Abstracts, CINAHL, Cochrane Library, ERIC, Google Scholar, MEDLINE, PsycINFO, PubMed, Social Services Abstracts, and Social Work Abstracts were searched from inception to March 2021. Inclusion criteria included: 1) the compassionate release policy (or related policy) is implemented in the United States; 2) reported qualitative and/or quantitative outcomes; and 3) reported original data. To assess the extent to which compassionate release laws are meeting the basic human rights of inmates, the application of a human rights framework is necessary.
Results: Twenty-five studies formed the final data set. Data analysis revealed four main themes: language barriers, complexities of eligibility criteria, over-reliance on prognostication, and social stigma. Barriers to inmates’ access to compassionate release policies include unclear or technical language utilized in policy documents. Eligibility criteria appear to vary across the country, including disease prognoses and the ability to predict terminal declines in health, creating confusion amongst inmates, lawyers, and review boards. Stigmas surrounding the rights of incarcerated individuals frequently influence policymakers who experience pressure to maintain a punitive stance to appease constituents, thus discouraging policies and interventions that promote the release of incarcerated individuals.
Conclusions and implications: Health disparities in the US criminal justice system are prevalent and well-documented. This particular population is thus challenged with poor access to and quality of health care in corrections. To promote human rights and social justice for this marginalized population, end-of-life interventions in corrections need to be consistently evaluated with outcomes that improve care for dying inmates. Social workers can play an integral role in influencing policymakers, as well as prison and medical staff attitudes toward dying inmates by providing an understanding of how to effectively support this vulnerable population. Within correctional facilities, social workers should play an integral role in influencing prison and medical staff attitudes toward dying inmates by providing an understanding of how to effectively support this vulnerable population. Social workers should participate in research which focuses on effective guidelines for correctional facilities to provide compassionate end-of-life care for inmates.
Learning Objectives:
increase their awareness of current compassionate release policies in the United States.
define the barriers incarcerated individuals endure in accessing these compassionate release policies.
share gaps in research, implications for social work practice, and encourage further studies regarding compassionate release policies.