NYMC Faculty Publications

The High Cost of the International Aging Prisoner Crisis: Well-Being as the Common Denominator for Action

Author Type(s)

Faculty

DOI

10.1093/geront/gns125

Journal Title

The Gerontologist

First Page

543

Last Page

554

Document Type

Article

Publication Date

8-1-2013

Department

Public Health

Abstract

The aging prisoner crisis continues to gain international attention as the high human, social, and economic costs of warehousing older adults with complex physical, mental health, and social care needs in prison continues to rise. According to the United Nations, older adults and the serious and terminally ill are considered special needs populations subject to special international health and social practice and policy considerations. We argue that older adults in prison have unique individual and social developmental needs that result from life course exposure to cumulative risk factors compounded by prison conditions that accelerate their aging. We position these factors in a social context model of human development and well-being and present a review of international human rights guidelines that pertain to promoting health and well-being to those aging in custody. The study concludes with promising practices and recommendations of their potential to reduce the high direct and indirect economic costs associated with mass confinement of older adults, many of whom need specialized long-term care that global correctional systems are inadequately equipped to provide.

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