Although patient safety events in VHA psychiatric inpatient units were relatively common, a great majority of these events resulted in little or no patient harm. Nevertheless, many were preventable, and the study provides data with which to target future initiatives that may improve the safety of this vulnerable patient population.
This study examined the extent to which severe mental illness (SMI) affects parole release decisions either directly or indirectly through its association with other factors considered in the parole release decision-making process. A random sample of 407 inmates with parole release decisions in 2007 (200 with SMI and 207 without SMI) was selected from the New Jersey State Parole Board. Data on inmates’ program participation, misconduct, and job assignments while incarcerated along with levels of community support and other pertinent release factors were collected. Differences between the SMI and non-SMI groups as well as the relationships among study variables, SMI, and release decisions were examined. Findings indicate that persons with SMI were released to parole at a rate similar to that of persons without SMI. However, the presence of SMI was associated with disciplinary infractions while incarcerated, which in turn negatively affected parole release decisions. Policy implications are discussed.
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