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July 3, 2015

Orange is the New Bleak: What the SHU Can Do to Your Brain

The inmates of Litchfield Penitentiary, the fictional setting for the Netflix TV series Orange is the New Black, are not shy women. 

They’ve landed in prison for murder, fraud, stalking, drug-smuggling, theft, and political activism. They do illegal activities behind the officers’ backs. They make their opinions known loud and clear to one another. And they’re not opposed to throwing a few punches, if duty calls.

But all will cease if you threaten to send them to the SHU. Why?


Netflix

The SHU (pronounced “shoe”), or “security housing unit,” is a separate prison facility designed to isolate inmates from any human contact. While sometimes used to protect the prisoner from harm by others or to themselves (to implement suicide watch, for example), it’s often used as punishment for violating prison regulations. At last count, it’s been estimated that over 80,000 prisoners in the U.S. are housed in the SHU – more than any other democratic country. And while inmates in minimum security may be held in the SHU for a few days at most, those in maximum security prisons can be in solitary for as long as five years.

philld (Wikimedia Commons)
Although there’s no single agreed-upon definition of solitary confinement, the United Nations describes it as any routine where prisoners are held in small cells for at least 22 hours a day under constant video surveillance.  The cramped, concrete cells, often just 6 x 10 feet, are constantly illuminated by fluorescent light and contain a bed, sink, toilet, and not much else. Except for prison guards, inmates are intentionally deprived of other people and stimuli, including television, radio, and perhaps no more than a few books. "The only thing left to do is go crazy—just sit and talk to the walls," a juvenile detainee in Florida was quoted, describing their time in the SHU. "Sometimes I feel like, ‘why am I even living’?"

Humans are social animals. We feel safer and happier in the company of others, seek friends and family for company and solace, and desire acceptance, friendship, and love. Our neocortex, the outermost layer of our brain, is comparatively larger than that of other primates and implicated in conscious thought, language, emotional regulation, empathy, and higher social cognition.

acsd.org
So it’s no wonder that psychologists and human rights advocates consider solitary confinement one of the worst possible forms of psychological torture. In simple terms, the SHU “destroys people as human beings,” according to psychologist Terry Kupers.

Literature reviews published in the last decade associate prisoner isolation with anxiety, panic attacks, depression, anger and hostility, poor memory and disorientation, and self-harm. With so much time spent alone, individuals become prone to hallucinations—particularly seeing people or hearing voices that aren’t there—paranoid thoughts, and distorted sensations, like perceiving the walls closing in on them. Of course, these mental health problems are often exacerbated by the fact that mentally ill patients are more likely to end up in the SHU in the first place.

As ruled in Ruiz v. Johnson (2001), "[Solitary confinement] units are virtual incubators of psychoses—seeding illness in otherwise healthy inmates and exacerbating illness in those already suffering from mental infirmities."

There’s also evidence suggesting that solitary confinement results in increased recidivism, perhaps due to lingering mental illness; more likely, though, the punishment does nothing to correct bad behavior. It’s estimated that 24.2% of prisoners in solitary are later reconvicted of a violent crime compared to 20.5% of general population prisoners.

Netflix

Long-term effects of solitary confinement likely depend on the individual and the type and duration of their experience. No follow-up studies, however, have been conducted on formerly isolated prisoners following their prison release. Many acute effects of solitary confinement are thought to subside over time, though psychiatrists have speculated that difficulties in social interaction, maintaining interpersonal relationships, and reintegrating oneself back to the “real world” persist as a result of long periods of solitary confinement. Other studies have reported sleep disturbances, depression, phobias, emotional dependence, and impaired memory and concentration years after release from similar types of isolated environments.

At the end of Orange is the New Black Season 3, we see a major character being led to the SHU by three guards, where she’ll stay for an indeterminate amount of time “for her own protection.”

We haven’t yet gotten to know any characters who have spent long periods of time in solitary, but I’m willing to bet we’ll see some unpleasant after-effects when Season 4 premieres next year.
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1 comment:

  1. I spent almost two months in a SHO as a teen. today I'm 36 suffer from massive bouts of depression, Narcolepsy, which is likely because I learned that forcing myself to sleep in there passed the time. I generally dislike crowds, people I do not know. I didn't have these issues as a youngster.

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