WCM part 2

Psychiatry / Behavioral Health in Correctional Medicine

Even if you are not functioning as the psychiatrist, behavioral health is one of the most important parts of correctional medicine. In many correctional settings, psychiatric illness affects nearly every aspect of medical care:

  • medication adherence
  • chronic pain
  • sleep complaints
  • somatic symptoms
  • substance use
  • behavioral problems
  • emergency evaluations
  • self-harm risk
  • interactions with staff

In women’s correctional facilities especially, trauma and psychiatric disease are extraordinarily common. Many incarcerated women have histories of:

  • childhood abuse
  • domestic violence
  • sexual assault
  • trafficking
  • unstable housing
  • severe substance use disorders
  • chronic untreated psychiatric illness

As a correctional GP, you are not expected to become a psychiatrist. Your job is to:

  • recognize psychiatric illness
  • identify dangerous situations
  • distinguish medical illness from psychiatric illness
  • recognize decompensation early
  • know when to escalate care urgently
  • avoid being manipulated without becoming cynical

A major skill in correctional medicine is learning how to stay calm, objective, compassionate, and structured during emotionally intense encounters.


1. Depression

Depression is extremely common in correctional populations.

Symptoms to recognize

Know the classic symptoms:

  • depressed mood
  • anhedonia
  • sleep disturbance
  • appetite changes
  • fatigue
  • impaired concentration
  • guilt/hopelessness
  • psychomotor slowing
  • suicidal thoughts

In corrections, depression may present as:

  • withdrawal from activities
  • isolation
  • irritability
  • chronic somatic complaints
  • “I don’t care anymore”
  • refusal of medications
  • poor hygiene
  • self-neglect

Important overlap

Depression often overlaps with:

  • PTSD
  • substance use
  • chronic pain
  • insomnia
  • personality disorders

Key point

Not every sad patient is clinically depressed, but do not minimize depressive symptoms in corrections. Incarceration itself can worsen underlying depression significantly.

Medications

You should know basics of:

  • SSRIs
  • SNRIs
  • bupropion
  • mirtazapine

Know common side effects:

  • sexual dysfunction
  • GI upset
  • insomnia
  • sedation
  • serotonin syndrome basics

Red flags

Escalate urgently for:

  • suicidal ideation
  • psychotic depression
  • inability to care for self
  • refusal of all food/fluids
  • catatonia

2. Anxiety

Anxiety disorders are extremely common.

Presentations

Patients may present with:

  • chest pain
  • palpitations
  • dizziness
  • abdominal pain
  • headaches
  • insomnia
  • shortness of breath
  • panic attacks

Important correctional principle

Never assume anxiety until medical causes are considered.

Always think about:

  • ACS
  • arrhythmia
  • PE
  • asthma
  • hyperthyroidism
  • withdrawal
  • hypoglycemia

Common correctional scenarios

  • Panic attacks after incarceration.
  • Anxiety worsened by confinement.
  • Medication-seeking behavior for benzodiazepines.
  • Trauma-triggered anxiety.

Benzodiazepines

Correctional systems are generally very cautious with benzodiazepines because of:

  • diversion
  • dependence
  • overdose risk
  • sedation
  • abuse potential

You should know:

  • withdrawal risk
  • seizure risk
  • safer alternatives

Good alternatives

  • SSRIs
  • hydroxyzine
  • buspirone
  • behavioral interventions

3. PTSD

PTSD is extraordinarily common in women’s facilities.

Many incarcerated women have severe trauma histories.

Symptoms

Know:

  • hypervigilance
  • nightmares
  • flashbacks
  • exaggerated startle response
  • avoidance
  • emotional numbing
  • irritability
  • dissociation

Correctional relevance

Correctional environments can trigger PTSD symptoms because:

  • loss of control
  • loud noises
  • confinement
  • authority conflicts
  • invasive procedures
  • physical searches

Important communication skill

Avoid unnecessarily confrontational interactions.

Simple approaches help:

  • explain procedures
  • maintain calm tone
  • avoid sudden movements
  • give patients some sense of predictability

Common overlap

PTSD frequently overlaps with:

  • substance use
  • chronic pain
  • depression
  • borderline personality disorder
  • insomnia

4. Bipolar Disorder

You should know basics of bipolar disorder because manic patients can become behaviorally disruptive and medically dangerous.

Mania symptoms

Know:

  • decreased need for sleep
  • pressured speech
  • grandiosity
  • impulsivity
  • hypersexuality
  • agitation
  • racing thoughts
  • risky behavior

Important distinction

Do not confuse:

  • stimulant intoxication
  • personality disorders
  • agitation
  • trauma reactions

with true mania.

Medications

Know basics of:

  • lithium
  • valproate
  • antipsychotics

Important medical issues

Lithium

Watch for:

  • dehydration
  • tremor
  • renal dysfunction
  • toxicity

Antipsychotics

Watch for:

  • QT prolongation
  • metabolic syndrome
  • sedation
  • EPS
  • neuroleptic malignant syndrome

Escalate urgently if:

  • severe agitation
  • psychosis
  • inability to sleep for days
  • violent behavior
  • suicidal or homicidal ideation

5. Schizophrenia Basics

You do not need advanced psychiatry training, but you must recognize psychosis.

Symptoms

Know:

  • hallucinations
  • delusions
  • disorganized thinking
  • paranoia
  • negative symptoms
  • flat affect

Important correctional issue

Psychotic patients may:

  • refuse medications
  • neglect hygiene
  • appear bizarre
  • become paranoid about staff
  • stop eating/drinking

Medical mimics

Always consider medical causes of psychosis:

  • intoxication
  • withdrawal
  • delirium
  • infection
  • CNS disease
  • severe metabolic abnormalities

Antipsychotic side effects

Know:

  • dystonia
  • akathisia
  • tardive dyskinesia
  • metabolic syndrome
  • sedation

Emergencies

Escalate immediately for:

  • command hallucinations
  • violent psychosis
  • severe self-neglect
  • catatonia
  • delirium

6. Suicide Risk Assessment

This is one of the most important correctional medicine skills.

Correctional populations have very high suicide risk.

High-risk situations

  • early incarceration
  • sentencing
  • bad legal news
  • withdrawal
  • isolation
  • severe depression
  • psychosis

Ask directly

You must be comfortable asking:

  • “Are you thinking about hurting yourself?”
  • “Do you have a plan?”
  • “Have you tried before?”

Asking does not “cause” suicide.

High-risk features

  • specific plan
  • prior attempts
  • hopelessness
  • psychosis
  • severe agitation
  • intoxication/withdrawal
  • recent trauma

Important correctional principle

Take suicidal statements seriously even if manipulation is possible.

Some patients use suicidal threats instrumentally.
Some die by suicide.
You cannot safely dismiss either automatically.

Documentation

Document:

  • exact statements
  • risk factors
  • protective factors
  • mental status
  • disposition

7. Personality Disorders

These are extremely common in corrections.

Especially:

  • borderline personality disorder
  • antisocial personality disorder

Borderline personality disorder

Common features:

  • emotional instability
  • splitting
  • fear of abandonment
  • self-harm
  • impulsivity
  • intense interpersonal conflict

Correctional challenges

Patients may:

  • idealize one staff member
  • demonize another
  • provoke conflict
  • escalate emotionally rapidly

Key approach

Be:

  • calm
  • structured
  • consistent
  • nonreactive

Do not:

  • argue emotionally
  • overpromise
  • retaliate
  • become overly attached

Antisocial traits

Some patients may:

  • manipulate
  • lie
  • seek secondary gain
  • exploit systems

Remain objective and document carefully.


8. Medication Side Effects

You need strong working knowledge of psych medication side effects.

SSRIs/SNRIs

Know:

  • serotonin syndrome
  • sexual dysfunction
  • GI symptoms
  • hyponatremia

Antipsychotics

Know:

  • metabolic syndrome
  • EPS
  • tardive dyskinesia
  • NMS
  • QT prolongation

Mood stabilizers

Lithium

  • toxicity
  • renal effects
  • thyroid dysfunction

Valproate

  • hepatotoxicity
  • thrombocytopenia

Sedation

Many psychiatric regimens cause:

  • falls
  • confusion
  • fatigue
  • orthostasis

This matters enormously in polypharmacy patients.


9. Somatic Complaints

Very common in corrections.

Patients may repeatedly present with:

  • headaches
  • abdominal pain
  • dizziness
  • chest pain
  • fatigue
  • numbness
  • vague pain

Important principle

Never assume symptoms are “just psychiatric.”

Always rule out dangerous medical illness first.

But also recognize:

  • anxiety amplification
  • trauma-related symptoms
  • somatization
  • chronic stress manifestations

Key skill

Learn to:

  • perform focused evaluations
  • avoid unnecessary escalation
  • remain respectful
  • avoid dismissiveness

Patients who feel ignored often escalate.


10. Malingering vs Real Disease

This is one of the hardest skills in correctional medicine.

Some patients may exaggerate symptoms for:

  • housing changes
  • medications
  • avoiding work
  • transfers
  • secondary gain

But serious illness also exists.

Dangerous mistake

The biggest error is becoming cynical.

If you assume everyone is malingering, eventually you will miss:

  • MI
  • appendicitis
  • psychosis
  • suicide risk
  • withdrawal
  • sepsis

Better approach

Stay objective:

  • assess symptoms
  • examine carefully
  • document findings
  • reassess over time

Do not personalize manipulation attempts.


Women’s Correctional Facilities: Important Themes

Trauma prevalence

Extremely high.

Trauma affects:

  • communication
  • emotional regulation
  • pain perception
  • trust
  • medication adherence

Sexual abuse history

Very common.

Be careful with:

  • physical exams
  • touch
  • invasive procedures
  • authority dynamics

Explain what you are doing clearly.


Self-harm

You will see:

  • cutting
  • ligature attempts
  • ingestion behaviors
  • repetitive superficial self-injury

Not all self-harm is suicidal, but all self-harm deserves careful evaluation.


Eating disorders

You may encounter:

  • anorexia
  • bulimia
  • laxative abuse
  • food restriction

Watch for:

  • electrolyte abnormalities
  • arrhythmias
  • severe malnutrition

Borderline personality disorder

Extremely common in women’s facilities.

The key is maintaining:

  • consistency
  • boundaries
  • calm professionalism

Substance use overlap

Psychiatric illness and substance use are deeply interconnected in corrections.

You will frequently see:

  • stimulant-induced psychosis
  • withdrawal anxiety
  • trauma/substance overlap
  • relapse fears

What You Actually Need to Know as a Correctional GP

You do not need to become a psychiatrist.

But you absolutely must know:

When someone is medically ill

Do not miss:

  • delirium
  • sepsis
  • withdrawal
  • hypoglycemia
  • head injury
  • overdose
  • medication toxicity

When someone is psychiatrically decompensating

Recognize:

  • psychosis
  • mania
  • suicidal depression
  • severe agitation
  • catatonia

When behavior is manipulation versus dangerous illness

This is often not immediately clear.

Stay objective.
Avoid emotional reactions.
Reassess over time.


When to escalate urgently

Escalate for:

  • suicidal ideation with intent
  • psychosis
  • violent agitation
  • delirium
  • inability to care for self
  • severe withdrawal
  • medication toxicity
  • refusal of food/fluids
  • altered mental status

The Core Mindset

The best correctional physicians:

  • remain calm
  • avoid power struggles
  • maintain boundaries
  • treat patients respectfully
  • recognize trauma
  • avoid cynicism
  • document carefully
  • reassess frequently
  • do not dismiss complaints prematurely

You are practicing medicine in a psychologically complex environment where psychiatric illness, trauma, substance use, and medical disease constantly overlap.