NCCHC Adopts New Position Statements | National Commission on Correctional Health Care

NCCHC Adopts New Position Statements

NCCHC’s Board of Representatives has approved two new position statements.

Restrictive Housing in Juvenile Correctional Settings addresses the need to reduce or eliminate the use of restrictive housing for youth in detention. Given the widespread use of restrictive housing and the well-understood negative health impacts of these practices, the need for this position statement is urgent.

The statement asserts that “the practice of restrictive housing should not be used in juvenile corrections,” either as a disciplinary or punitive measure, as a response to minor infractions, because of staffing shortages, for administrative convenience, or for retaliation. It outlines measures that should be considered as alternatives to restrictive housing and delineates steps that must be taken to ensure the health and well-being of juveniles in the rare event that restrictive housing is necessary.

The Use of Humanizing Language in Correctional Health Care position statement supports the use of respectful language to describe individuals who experience incarceration. NCCHC recommends that those who work in correctional facilities or interact with people experiencing incarceration use person-centered language, such as “incarcerated people” instead of “inmates” or “offenders.”

Recently revised position statements include:

View all positions statements and download PDF versions >>

Position statements augment the Standards or express NCCHC’s expert opinion on important issues that are not addressed in the Standards.

Related News

Preceptor Directory graphic

Introducing the NCCHC Foundation Preceptorship Portal and Workforce Development Hub

A strong correctional health care workforce doesn’t happen by chance. It grows through mentorship,
CDC logo sized png

CDC Seeks Input on Correctional Food Service Knowledge

Please help CDC assess food safety by May 5.
Richard Blog Post

NCCHC in Correctional News: “The Greater Risk: Failing to Modernize Jail Health Operations”

Correctional leaders today are navigating an increasingly complex landscape — one where medical, behavioral,

Post: NCCHC Adopts New Position Statements