Use of restraints on pregnant women

The use of shackles or restraints on pregnant women is still a common practice in prisons and jails in the United States.[1] Shackling is defined as “using any physical restraint of mechanical device to control the movement of a prisoner’s body or limbs, including handcuffs, leg shackles, and belly chains.”[2] For females, shackles or handcuffs are placed around the ankles, wrists or around the stomach.[3] The shackling of pregnant women occurs while they are being moved around the facility, in transport to a hospital, and/or during and after childbirth.[1] Outside of prisons and jails, there has also been attention generated around the use of shackles on detained pregnant women in immigration detention facilities.[4] Pregnant women, girls, fetuses and newborns under correctional custody have unique healthcare needs. These needs are typically not addressed by most custody policies. This puts these women and girls at high-risk pregnancies because they are exposed to lack of obstetric care, lack of adequate nutrition, physical and emotional abuse, traumatic experiences, mental health issues, sexually transmitted infections, etc.[5]

Background

Standard Leg Schackles

Prisons in the United States have been primarily designed for male offenders, where there has historically and continues to be a disproportionately higher percentage of males to females incarcerated across the United States.[6] In 2009, the U.S. Bureau of Justice Statistics found the correctional population in the United States to be 8.7% women or 198,600 of 2,292,133 incarcerated persons.[7] Male inmates in general also have more violent criminal histories and are more likely to be serving time for violent offenses than their female counterparts. The Bureau of Justice Statics reported, “Women are substantially more likely than men to be serving time for a drug offense and less likely to have been sentenced for a violent crime.” [8] Accordingly, men are twice as likely as women to be violent recidivists,[8] while women account for only fourteen percent of violent offenses and three of four violent female offenders commit simple assault.[1]

Due to the disproportionately higher incarceration rates of violent male offenders to female offenders, many across the international rights community agree prisons have predominantly been designed to control male inmates, particularly those who are violent.[7] For these reasons, there is much controversy surrounding the use of shackles on women in general and pregnant women in particular. Adding to the controversy is the issue of race. Since there is a disproportionately higher rate of women of color incarcerated across the United States, a greater number of African-American and Hispanic women are affected by the practice overall.[9]

Pregnant inmates

According to the Bureau of Justice Assistance (BJA), “Four percent of state and three percent of federal inmates said they were pregnant at the time of admission.”[10] Upon intake the BJA also found that “five percent of women in jails reported being pregnant.”[10] However, there are no concrete statistics on the number of pregnant girls (younger than age 18) in juvenile justice facilities, where the number of pregnant girls is not tracked.[10]

Opposing viewpoints

There are three primary justifications used to support the use of restraint on pregnant women. First, restraints prevent inmates from bringing harm to themselves and others; second, restraints prevent the escape or attempt to escape of pregnant women;[3] and third, restraints are meant to maintain security in general.[8] Moreover, these justifications are identical to those used to support the use of restraints on male and female inmates in general population across various state and federal facilities.[8] Correctional department officials have also cited their responsibility or burden to balance the health and safety of the inmate with that of the public’s in further support of the use of restraints on pregnant women.[8]

Opponents of the practice offer several counterarguments to the justifications presented above by correctional facilities. They argue foremost the use of restraints on pregnant women raises important human rights concerns and increases health risks to the woman and her child.[3] Many in the international community are also quick to point out pregnant women are lower security threats to themselves and others.[7] In particular, the International Human Rights Clinic, CLAIM and the ACLU filed a joint report stating, “Women who are pregnant, in labor, or in postpartum recovery are especially low flight and safety risks.”[3] In support of this point of view, Geraldine Doetzer in “Hard Labor” states that pregnant women who are in active labor “are physically much less able to mount an attack or escape attempt.”[8]

Health risks and concerns

A number of health concerns have been raised by the American College of Obstetricians and Gynecologists (ACOG), the American Public Health Association, the American Medical Association and others surrounding the use of shackles on pregnant women.[3] These concerns involve various increased health risks to the woman and her child, which arise at different points of shackling. While pregnant during incarceration, shackles can increase the risk of falling where a woman’s center of gravity is shifted by the pregnant uterus. For example, restraints placed on a woman’s wrists also prevent her from breaking a fall and protecting herself and her abdomen.[3] In regards to sickness and treatment, the use of shackles complicates the assessment of physical and other medical conditions before and during the process of childbirth.[2] Such include diagnostic tests to determine the source of abdominal pains and nausea, hypertensive diseases—which occur in 12-22% of pregnancies—and of vaginal bleeding, which all pose severe threats to the health of the mother and the fetus.[2]

Restraints can also interfere with normal labor and delivery of the child where it is important for women to be able to ambulate during labor to alleviate pain and be able to be moved quickly in case an emergency Caesarean section or C-section operation becomes necessary.[4] In particular, complications from hemorrhages, a decrease in fetal heart tones, or preeclampsia often necessitate an emergency C-section.[3] For these reasons, the American Public Health Association, responsible for promulgating standards for healthcare provisions in prison, warns “[w]omen must never be shackled during labor and delivery.” [2] Post childbirth, restraints can interfere with the mother’s ability to safely handle and enhance a close bond with her infant.[2] During the postpartum stages, the restriction in mobility from restraints can also place the woman at increased risk for contracting the thromboembolic disease and getting a postpartum hemorrhage.[3]

Policy perspectives

State and local

On the domestic front, states have recently begun to move to eliminate or greatly reduce the use of restraints on pregnant women in their facilities.[3] Three states, California, Illinois and New York have taken the lead on passing statewide legislation to entirely eliminate the practice,[1] while 24 states in total have adopted policies outlining limitations on the use of restraints on pregnant prisoners. On the other hand, a number of states still allow for the use of restraints on pregnant women with no restrictions on the practice. Meanwhile, of the states that have passed restrictions of some sort, 18 still include broad exceptions to the rule.[3] More broadly speaking too, 48 states lack legislation that lay out specific protections for incarcerated pregnant women for correctional facilities to respect.[1]

In 2014, the Bureau of Justice Assistance (BJA) under the U.S. Department of Justice released a report entitled “Best Practices in the Use of Restraints with Pregnant Women and Girls under Correctional Custody.”[10] This statement on best practices was created by the National Task Force on the Use of Restraints with Pregnant Women under Correctional Custody to guide and assist institutions and jurisdictions in “the development of local policy and practice.”[10] The report itself outlines five key principles the Task Force reached consensus on and eleven recommendations concerning the use of restraints on pregnant women. In particular, the five principles discuss the following: the importance of written policies and procedures on the use of restraints during custody and transport, who should be writing these policies, the unique healthcare needs and circumstance of pregnant women and girls and the related health risks posed by restraints, and the limitation on the use of restraints to “absolute necessity.”[10] Meanwhile, the eleven recommendations outline specific cases where the use of restraints should be prohibited, avoided and/or limited, as well as what facility standard operating procedures should include regarding the use of restraints on pregnant women.[10] The ACOG, the professional organization of Obstetrics and Gynecology, standards specifically state, that the use of restraints on pregnant incarcerated women and adolescents compromises health care and inhumane. Georgia, South Carolina, Kentucky, Mississippi, Missouri, Nebraska, North Dakota, South Dakota, Wyoming and Alabama have no policies. Many other states have policies about providing healthcare for pregnant inmates, but do not mention anything about restraining or shackling them.[11]

Massachusetts

Massachusetts in April 2014 passed an act allowing for the use of restraints in “extraordinary circumstances.” Such “extraordinary circumstances” include anytime a corrections officer deems it necessary that restraints be used to prevent a pregnant inmate from escaping or from causing self-injury or injuring medical or correctional personnel.[12]

Pennsylvania

In Pennsylvania, pregnant prisoners can be shackled and handcuffed during the delivery of the child. In fact, the state reported that over 100 pregnant women were shackled during a year-long period between July 2012 to June 2013.[13]

California

In January 2006, California passed legislation stating that a pregnant “inmate shall not be shackled by the wrists, ankles, or both during labor, including during transport to a hospital, during delivery, and while in recovery after giving birth.” [1]

Maryland

Maryland’s policy states that they do limit the use of restrains, but nowhere does it say anything about the use of shackles or restraints on pregnant incarcerated women.[14]

Florida

Florida prohibits use of restraints on a pregnant prisoner regardless if it is during labor, delivery, and postpartum recovery unless a corrections official makes an individualized determination that the prisoner presents an extraordinary circumstance requiring restraints.[15]

West Virginia

West Virginia states pregnant inmates will not be restrained after reaching the second trimester of pregnancy until the end of the pregnancy, unless she poses a threat of escape or safety of herself, the public, staff or the fetus. Then the inmate may be restrained, but she will also consult with an appropriate health care professional to assure that the manner of restraint will not pose an unreasonable risk of harm to the inmate or the fetus.[16]

Rhode Island

Rhode Island’s policy states that pregnant inmates cannot be restrained in their second or third trimester, unless deemed medically appropriate.[17]

Hawaii

Hawaii states that no restraints may be used on any committed female during the third trimester of her pregnancy, During postpartum recovery; or During any portion of her pregnancy, if her physician so orders; except in extraordinary circumstances.[18]

Iowa

Iowa’s law prohibits prisons and jails from shackling all inmates in labor or recovery.[19]

Idaho

Idaho states that A correctional institution cannot use restraints on a prisoner known to be pregnant during labor and delivery, except in an extraordinary circumstance, where a corrections official makes an individualized determination that restraints are necessary to prevent a prisoner from escaping or from injuring herself.[20]

Washington

In Washington the use of restraints on pregnant women or youth in custody is allowed in extraordinary circumstances.[21]

Federal

In 2008, the Federal Bureau of Prisons mandated that in all federal correctional facilities “inmates in labor, delivery, or post-delivery recuperations shall not be placed in restraints unless there are reasonable grounds to believe the inmate presents an immediate serious threat of hurting herself or others, or there are reasonable grounds to believe the inmate presents an immediate and credible risk of escape.”[4] President George W. Bush in April 2008 also signed the Second Chance Act into law, requiring all federal facilities to document and report “the use of physical restraints on pregnant female prisoners during pregnancy, labor, delivery, and post-delivery and justify the use of restraints with documented security concerns.”[4] This shift in federal policies, limiting and reporting the use of restraints on pregnant women, thereby parallels the policy changes being made at the state and local levels mentioned above.

International

The use of shackles on pregnant women by correctional facilities in the United States has been widely criticized by the international community. The following have been cited as international policies which this practice violates: Articles 7 and 10 of the International Covenant on Civil and Political Rights (ICCPR) [3] Article 16 of the Convention Against Torture (CAT), and the United Nations Standard Minimum Rules for the Treatment of Prisoners.[4] In response to reports presented by Amnesty International, the United Nations Human Rights Committee recommended to the United States in 2006 to “prohibit the shackling of detained women during childbirth” to come into compliance with the aforementioned international treaties. Much of the state and federal level policies enacted to eliminate or reduce the use of shackles on pregnant women have served as a response to these recommendations and statements issued by the United Nations.[4] They proposed that the U.S. “1) enact a federal law banning the practice of shackling prisoners during pregnancy, covering, at a minimum, the third trimester, transport to medical facilities, labor, delivery and postpartum recovery, 2) take appropriate measures to ensure that those 32 states that do not have anti-shackling laws to enact comprehensive laws, including training of correctional officers, 3) to review existing state anti- shackling laws and policies to ensure that they are comprehensive and fully-implemented, and 4) to conduct an empirical study to determine the scope of shackling in U.S. prisons and to understand why the practice of shackling pregnant women persists.” [22] In Britain, the laws state that pregnant women will no longer wear restraints within hospitals, unless they are considered to be high security risks. They will be allowed to have antenatal visits and at least at the prison there will be one accompanying woman.[23]

Legal perspectives

On the legal front, the use of restraints on pregnant women has been repeatedly challenged for violating the Eight Amendment of the United States Constitution which prohibits “cruel and unusual punishment.” [24] In a recent landmark decision, the United States Court of Appeals for the Eighth Circuit supported this claim in the case, Nelson v. Correctional Medical Services. The Court held that the Arkansas law “‘clearly established’ that shackling a women prisoner during labor and delivery violated the Eighth Amendment, imposing cruel and unusual punishment.”[24] In their Judicial Opinion, the Court cited Estelle v. Gamble, where the Supreme Court held “deliberate indifference” to provide medical care to incarcerated populations violated the Eighth Amendment based on the government’s obligation to abide by “an evolving standard of human decency.” [24]

References

  1. 1 2 3 4 5 6 Sichel, D.L. (2008). "Giving Birth in Shackles: A Constitutional and Human Rights Violation" (PDF). Journal of Gender, Social Policy & The Law. 16 (2): 223–255.
  2. 1 2 3 4 5 The American College of Obstetricians and Gynecologists (November 2011). "Health Care for Pregnant and Postpartum Incarcerated Women and Adolescent Females" (PDF). Women's Health Care Physicians (511).
  3. 1 2 3 4 5 6 7 8 9 10 11 International Human Rights Clinic, CLAIM & ACLU (August 2013). "The Shackling of Incarcerated Pregnant Women: A Human Rights Violation Committed Regularly in the United States" (PDF).
  4. 1 2 3 4 5 6 Sussman, Dana (2009). "Bound by Injustice: Challenging the Use of Shackles on Incarcerated Pregnant Women" (PDF). Cardozo Journal of Law & Gender. 15 (477).
  5. Justice, B. o. (2014). Best Practices in the Use of restraints with Pregnant women and girls Under correctional cUstody. Retrieved November 23, 2014, from http://cjinvolvedwomen.org/sites/all/documents/Best-Practices-Use-of-Restraints-Pregnant.pdf
  6. Clarke, Jennifer G. (March 2011). "Perinatal Care for Incarcerated Patients". The Journal of the American Medical Association. 305 (9).
  7. 1 2 3 Dharmaraj, Krishanti. "Shackling of Pregnant Inmates: A Violation of Human Rights" (PDF). International Human Rights Funders Group. Retrieved 28 September 2014.
  8. 1 2 3 4 5 6 Doetzer, Geraldine (2008). "Hard Labor: The Legal Implications of Shackling Female Inmates During Pregnancy and Childbirth". William and Mary Journal of Women and Law. 14 (2).
  9. Parker, Kelly (2005). "Pregnant Women Inmates: Evaluating Their Rights and Identifying Opportunities for Improvements in Their Treatment". Journal of Law and Health. 19 (259).
  10. 1 2 3 4 5 6 7 Bureau of Justice Assistance (2014). "Best Practices in the Use of Restraints with Pregnant Women and Girls under Correctional Custody" (PDF).
  11. American Civil Liberties Union. (2014). State Standards for Pregnancy-Related Health Care and Abortion for Women in Prison. Retrieved November 19, 2014, from American Civil Liberties Union: https://www.aclu.org/maps/state-standards-pregnancy-related-health-care-and-abortion-women-prison-map
  12. [The General Court. (2014, April 3). Bill H.1433 188th Current An Act relative to prevent shackling and promote safe pregnancies for female inmates. Retrieved November 4, 2014, from The 188th General Court of The Commonwealth Massachusetts: https://malegislature.gov/Bills/188/House/H1433]
  13. [QUINN, A. (2014, July 26). n Labor, in Chains: The Outrageous Shackling of Pregnant Inmates. Retrieved November 5, 2014, from The New York Times: http://www.nytimes.com/2014/07/27/opinion/sunday/the-outrageous-shackling-of-pregnant-inmates.html?_r=0]
  14. Schwartzman, K. H. (2013, March 13). Maryland delegates consider a ban on using restraints on pregnant inmates. Retrieved November 23, 2014, from The Washington Post: http://www.washingtonpost.com/local/md-politics/maryland-delegates-consider-a-ban-on-using-restraints-on-pregnant-inmates/2013/03/10/a32ce2aa-8750-11e2-98a3-b3db6b9ac586_story.html
  15. Joyner. (2012, April 7). SB 524: Restraint of Incarcerated Pregnant Women. Retrieved December 1, 2014, from The Florida Senate: http://www.flsenate.gov/Session/Bill/2012/0524
  16. 31-20-30a. Mechanical restraints during pregnancy. (2014). Retrieved December 1, 2014, from West Virginia Lesgislature: http://www.legis.state.wv.us/wvcode/ChapterEntire.cfm?chap=31&art=20&section=30A
  17. Rhode Island Department of Corrections Policy and Procedure. (2012, February 27). Retrieved December 1, 2014, from http://www.doc.ri.gov/documents/administration/policy/9.17.pdf
  18. Hawaii Capitol Government. (n.d.). 353-122 Limitation on use of restraints. Retrieved December 1, 2014, from http://www.capitol.hawaii.gov/hrscurrent/Vol07_Ch0346-0398/HRS0353/HRS_0353-0122.htm
  19. Jordan, E. (2014, March 31). Special Report: Pregnant inmates get top care and two days with newborn. Retrieved December 1, 2014, from The Gazette: http://thegazette.com/2011/01/30/pregnant-inmates-get-top-notch-care-and-two-days-with-newborn/
  20. Legislature, I. (2011). TITLE 20 STATE PRISON AND COUNTY JAILS CHAPTER 9 RESTRAINT OF PREGNANT PRISONERS. Retrieved December 1, 2014, from Idaho Statutes.
  21. RCW 72.09.651 . (2010). Retrieved December 1, 2014, from Washington State Legislature: http://apps.leg.wa.gov/rcw/default.aspx?cite=72.09.651
  22. THE SHACKLING OF INCARCERATED PREGNANT WOMEN: A HUMAN RIGHTS VIOLATION COMMITTED REGULARLY IN THE UNITED STATES. (2013, August). Retrieved November 23, 2014, from https://ihrclinic.uchicago.edu/sites/ihrclinic.uchicago.edu/files/uploads/Report%20-%20Shackling%20of%20Pregnant%20Prisoners%20in%20the%20US.pdf
  23. DILLNER, L. (1996, January 13). Shackling prisoners in hospital. Retrieved November 23, 2014, from http://rageuniversity.org/PRISONESCAPE/EVASION%20OUTSIDE%20PRISON/Shackling%20prisoners%20in%20hospital.pdf
  24. 1 2 3 Griggs, Claire Louise (2011). "Birthing Barbarism: The Unconstitutionality of Shackling Pregnant Prisoners". Journal of Gender, Social Policy & Law. 20 (1): 247–271.
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