The Commercial Appeal

Half of NYC jailed youths suffer from brain injury

Assaults cause most

- By Jake Pearson Associated Press

NEW YORK — About half of all 16- to 18-yearolds coming into New York City’s jails say they had a traumatic brain injury before being incarcerat­ed, most caused by assaults.

That’s according to a new study by New York City doctors that’s the latest in a growing body of research documentin­g head trauma among young offenders.

The findings were published this week in The Journal of Adolescent Health. Experts say they could lead to better training for guards on how to deal with the symptoms of such trauma, which include problems with impulse control and decision-making.

“You need to train the correction officers to understand brain injuries so that when somebody may be acting rude or answering back or forgetting what they’re supposed to do, it’s not a sign of maladaptiv­e misbehavio­r or disrespect — it’s a sign of a brain injury,” said Wayne Gordon, a brain in-

What’s happening with many of these kids ... is they’re having them early in life.” John D. Corrigan, national expert on head injuries

jury expert at New York’s Mount Sinai Hospital.

The study found nearly 50 percent of both boys and girls reported traumatic brain injuries that resulted in unconsciou­sness and/ or amnesia. And they said 55 percent of those injuries were caused by assaults.

The peer- reviewed study was based on medical brain injury questionna­ires given to 300 boys and 84 girls inside the nation’s second-largest jail system in 2012.

Previous studies show the rate of traumatic brain injury among adolescent­s who aren’t incarcerat­ed is about 15 to 30 percent, said Dr. Homer Venters, an assistant health commission­er in New York City and one of the study’s authors.

Brain injuries are often undiagnose­d or misdiagnos­ed because people with them don’t necessaril­y show obvious, immediate signs of injury. But research about them has increased in recent years, as combat veterans and children who play contact sports have displayed symptoms, experts said.

A growing body of research shows that inmates whose brains have been jolted by trauma are linked to higher rates of breaking jailhouse rules, substance abuse and greater difficulty re-entering society after detention, said John D. Corrigan, a professor in the Department of Physical Medicine and Reha- bilitation at Ohio State University and a national expert on head injuries.

“What’s happening with many of these kids, these young adults in the criminal population, is they’re having them early in life,” and their consequenc­es aren’t noticed until later, he said.

An estimated 60 percent of adult prisoners have a brain injury, according to a study of prisoners in South Carolina. Not all correction department­s screen inmates for the injury — a practice public health officials say should change.

Juvenile justice centers in Texas and Virginia have started to study rates of traumatic brain injury and its impact on young offenders, according to the U.S. Department of Health and Human Services.

And in the United Kingdom, a national campaign on the issue has resulted in a commission that found almost two-thirds of young inmates suffered from head trauma, which University of Exeter researcher­s found in 2010 is associated with earlier, repeated and more time spent in custody.

Nearly 4,000 adolescent inmates were admitted into custody on Rikers Island in 2013 and about half return within a year of being discharged, the city Department of Correction said.

“This study provides valuable insight about adolescent behavior,” a DOC spokesman said. “We look forward to working with our partners to develop new tools to meet the needs of adolescent­s who we know are more likely to be involved in the criminal justice system.”

Newspapers in English

Newspapers from United States