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International Journal of Emergency Mental Health and Human Resilience | ISSN: 1522-4821 | Volume 20

November 26-27, 2018 | Los Angeles, USA

Psychiatry, Mental Health Nursing and Healthcare

World Summit on

Applied Psychology, Psychiatry and Mental Health

International Conference on

&

Early detection of mental illness in the correctional setting with the use of correctional mental health

screening tool for men

Grashika Devendra

WellPath, USA

T

he needs of patients with mental health disorders are being questioned in correctional facilities. According to Mental

Health America (2016), between 300,000 and 400,000 people with mental illness are incarcerated in the jails and prisons in

the United States. The importance of early detection of mental illnesses is crucial in the correctional setting to decrease mental

health crises, for example, suicides and other psychotic episodes. The nursing staff working in the correctional setting need

to be educated, trained and introduced to this population. A Mental Health screening tool must be utilized to help identify

these inmates early on. This project was conducted to improve the number of mental health referrals by nursing staff in a

corrections system of care, over three months period in a jail in California. The medical nurses, who did admissions or intakes,

at the correctional facility were selected. The participants were trained to use the Correctional Mental Health Screening tool

for Men (CMHS-M) at intake. The correctional mental health tool for men (CMHS-M), is a tool designed for the purpose of

early detection of mental illness in the correctional setting. This tool helps assist in the early identification of mental illness so

that appropriate interventions are made accordingly. Screening is important because it can distinguish if a patient/inmate is

suffering from a mental illness, substance abuse problems, development delays or intellectual difficulties, or other deficits in

their cognitive functioning. This tool showed evidence of reliability, validity and predictive utility in relation to the accurate

identification of undetected mental illnesses (Gonzales, Schofield, Hagy & US Department of Justice Office of Justice Programs

National Institute of Justice (NIJ), 2007). A paired samples t-test was used to gather pre-and post-data results. The overall

results helped increase the mental health patient referrals by nursing staff through early detection of mental illnesses. The aim

of this project was to utilize the CMHS-M tool with an adult male population in the correctional setting to determine whether

this tool should be used as a screening instrument for the identification of mental health problems on a permanent basis. This

project showed that the CMHS-M tool does screen for mental illness among male inmates resulting in increased referrals

for mental health care. It is a guide for medical nurses to refer patients to the providers, which leads to early treatment and

prevention of mental illness.

Biography

Grashika Devendra was born in the beautiful island of Fiji where she finished primary school. She moved to the United States and further finished high school and

graduated with Associate Degree Nursing from Modesto, California and got her Bachelor’s Degree from California State University, Stanislaus. She graduated from

nursing school and got licensed and started her career in Psych Nursing. At first, she was scared and unsure of my career in Psych Nursing, but as the days went

by, she became sure and her path became clearer. She gained her experience at inpatient and outpatient psychiatric facilities and then went into Correctional Psych

Nursing. She wanted to further her career in the psychiatric field and gaining her Doctor of Nursing Practice, Psychiatric Mental Health Nurse Practitioner was the

best option and career for her. Innovation in Psychiatry is her goal and passion.

devendragrashika@gmail.com

Grashika Devendra, Int J Emerg Ment Health, Volume 20

DOI: 10.4172/1522-4821-C5-023