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Maltreatment of women in priso

 

The officer is in complete charge of a prisoner's well-being. Some women are coerced into sex for favors or to avoid punishment. Because prisoners are completely dependent on officers for the most basic necessities, threat to withhold privileges or goods is a very powerful inducement (Watterson 25).
             In some instances, women have become pregnant as a result of sexual misconduct, and some of these prisoners have faced additional abuse in the form of inappropriate segregation, denial of adequate healthcare, and/or pressure to seek an abortion.
             While medical care for all prisoners is poor, the situation is far worse for women prisoners. Because prison healthcare systems were created for men, routine female exams are extremely rare in prisons. Care is frequently only administered once the situation becomes an emergency. Life-threatening illnesses often go unchecked or without adequate treatment. Women inmates suffering from treatable diseases such as asthma, diabetes, anemia, long-term miscarriages, and seizures have little or no access to medical attention, sometimes resulting in death or permanent injury (Rights For All).
             A half a million children are separated from their mothers by jail and prison bars. The low priority given by prison administrators to maintaining mother/child relationships contributes to family disruption and children's social alienation (Rights For All). Because facilities are located in remote towns, half of these women do not see their children. Women incarcerated in federal prisons are often shipped out of state and are out of touch with their children and other family members. Few prisons have facilities that are designed for family visits or encourage interaction between the mothers and their children. Many jails and detention centers do not allow contact visits. Women worry about their children and suffer a combination of psychological symptoms such as depression, feelings of loss, guilt, and failure.


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