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Prevalence of criminal thinking among state prison inmates with serious mental illness

Robert D. Morgan, Texas Tech University
William H. Fisher, University of Massachusetts Medical School
Naihua Duan, Columbia University
Jon T. Mandracchia, Texas Tech University
Danielle Murray, Texas Tech University

Abstract

To examine the prevalence of criminal thinking in mentally disordered offenders, incarcerated male (n = 265) and female (n = 149) offenders completed measures of psychiatric functioning and criminal thinking. Results indicated 92% of the participants were diagnosed with a serious mental illness, and mentally disordered offenders produced criminal thinking scores on the Psychological Inventory of Criminal Thinking Styles (PICTS) and Criminal Sentiments Scale-Modified (CSS-M) similar to that of non-mentally ill offenders. Collectively, results indicated the clinical presentation of mentally disordered offenders is similar to that of psychiatric patients and criminals. Implications are discussed with specific focus on the need for mental health professionals to treat co-occurring issues of mental illness and criminality in correctional mental health treatment programs.

Suggested Citation

Robert D. Morgan, William H. Fisher, Naihua Duan, Jon T. Mandracchia, and Danielle Murray. "Prevalence of criminal thinking among state prison inmates with serious mental illness" Law and human behavior 34.4 (2010).
Available at: http://works.bepress.com/william_h_fisher/35