By Paul Elias
San Jose Mercury News
SAN FRANCISCO — Although California has spent hundreds of millions of dollars to improve psychiatric treatment for convicts, the biggest mental health unit in the state prison system for high security inmates remains in disarray, according to a court-appointed investigator and others familiar with the facility.
State officials acknowledge high turnover at the approximately 350-bed mental health unit at Salinas Valley State Prison in Soledad. But a court-appointed “special master” says that the departure of psychiatrists who were fired or quit has left the unit seriously understaffed, with doctors handling twice their case loads of the previous year.
The unit at Salinas Valley —operated by the Department of State Hospitals rather than the California Department of Corrections and Rehabilitation— is also plagued by problems ranging from a shortage of clean linens and undergarments to complaints that security protocols severely hinder patient treatment, the special master said.
Full Story: Problems persist in CA prison mental health ward