Current:Home > ContactSuicide Watch Incidents in Louisiana Prisons Spike by Nearly a Third on Extreme Heat Days, a New Study Finds -Prosperity Pathways
Suicide Watch Incidents in Louisiana Prisons Spike by Nearly a Third on Extreme Heat Days, a New Study Finds
View
Date:2025-04-28 14:46:05
The number of suicide watch incidents in Louisiana prisons increased by 30 percent on extreme heat days, a recently published study in the JAMA Journal found. Researchers from Emory University analyzed data from 2015 to 2017 to examine how the heat index related to suicide watch incidents in six prisons. At the time, only one had air conditioning.
Scientists classified days into six categories according to their average heat index, and also created an “extreme heat indicator” for those that were hotter than 90 percent of the days. The number of people put under suicide watch increased 36 percent when the heat index was above 90 degrees and 30 percent on the extreme heat days, which in most cases were even hotter.
The study adds to the body of research that has found a link between suicide and hot weather, but also to new research on prison mortality and climate.
“It’s so novel, and I am very excited that it is being published in a medical journal,” said Grady Dixon, a climatologist from Fort Hays University who didn’t participate in the study. “Any shortcomings the study can have are just minor compared to the widespread impact this paper can have just by publicizing this issue.”
Scientists have consistently found that unusually hot weather is often associated with suicides and other adverse mental health outcomes.
“That word ‘unusual’ is really important because it’s not just hotter weather equals more suicides,” Dixon says. The days that are warmer than expected, even if they happen during winter, are the ones with the biggest spikes, he said.
Although there is still no clear explanation for this, some scientists believe it is related to how warm weather negatively affects sleep.
In March, another study by authors at Brown, Harvard and Boston universities found suicide rates in Texas prisons increased 23 percent the days after an extreme heat event.
But the Emory study uses another variable: suicide watch incidents, when correctional staff puts someone under observation because they fear they will kill themselves.
Although not every person put on suicide watch commits suicide, it’s a measure of the distress that happens during heat, said David Cloud, the study’s lead author and a Ph.D. candidate at Emory.
Julie Skarha, an epidemiologist from Brown University who co-authored the March study and didn’t participate in the Louisiana research, said the work was “so important because it’s another element of how heat is affecting people’s health.” The study also highlights the fact that people with mental health problems are overrepresented in prisons, which makes them more vulnerable to the heat’s adverse effects on mental health. “Prison is stressful enough, and then you add this layer of heat that people are powerless to escape,” Cloud said.
Heat in prisons has been a matter of litigation for Louisiana, and other states, since at least 2013. That year, the Promise of Justice Initiative represented several people who faced mental and physical health consequences from being exposed to seasonal heat in one Louisiana prison.
In 2014, another group filed a class-action lawsuit against the Texas Department of Criminal Justice over the lack of air conditioning in prisons.
This summer, during record heat waves, prisoners’ families rallied outside the Texas Capitol to protest the heat conditions in prisons. The Texas Tribune reported at least nine people died of cardiac events in uncooled prisons during the summer, and there have been 28 suicides in all prisons this year, according to data from the Texas Justice Initiative. Much like with Covid, the climate crisis is going to exacerbate any existing issues inside the prison walls, Cloud said.
For him, it is “baffling” to see how much money states spend on litigation cycles instead of on implementing the air conditioning that prisons need. “We can all see the problem, we can all feel the problem,” he said. “But why don’t we use our money to do something about it rather than fight?”
veryGood! (1835)
Related
- Senate begins final push to expand Social Security benefits for millions of people
- Katy Perry and Taylor Swift Shake Off Bad Blood Rumors Once and For All at Eras Tour in Sydney
- EPA approves year-round sales of higher ethanol blend in 8 Midwest states
- Person of interest being questioned in killing of Laken Riley at the University of Georgia
- Krispy Kreme offers a free dozen Grinch green doughnuts: When to get the deal
- Alpha Elite Capital (AEC) Corporate Management, Practitioners for the Benefit of Society
- 2 children were killed when a hillside collapsed along a Northern California river
- Bobi loses title of world's oldest dog ever, after Guinness investigation
- A South Texas lawmaker’s 15
- Private lunar lander is closing in on the first US touchdown on the moon in a half-century
Ranking
- Costco membership growth 'robust,' even amid fee increase: What to know about earnings release
- Former Colorado police officer appeals conviction in Black man Elijah McClain’s death
- South Carolina bans inmates from in-person interviews. A lawsuit wants to change that
- Dashiell Soren: Pioneering AI-driven Finance Education and Investment
- Meet first time Grammy nominee Charley Crockett
- The Excerpt podcast: Restoring the Klamath River and a way of life
- 2 children were killed when a hillside collapsed along a Northern California river
- Trump moves to dismiss classified documents case, claiming immunity and unlawful appointment of special counsel
Recommendation
Jamie Foxx reps say actor was hit in face by a glass at birthday dinner, needed stitches
Don Henley's attempt to reclaim stolen Eagles lyrics to Hotel California was thwarted by defendants, prosecutors say
The Science of IVF: What to know about Alabama's 'extrauterine children' ruling
Utah man sues Maduro over trauma caused by nearly two years of imprisonment in Venezuela
Former longtime South Carolina congressman John Spratt dies at 82
Wendy Williams' Medical Diagnosis: Explaining Primary Progressive Aphasia and Frontotemporal Dementia
What does gender expansive mean? Oklahoma teen's death puts gender identity in spotlight.
A look at Nvidia’s climb to prominence in the AI world, by the numbers