Physical violence inside female prisons in Brazil: prevalence and related factors

Violência física dentro das prisões femininas no Brasil: prevalência e fatores relacionados

Isabelle Silva Gama-Araujo José Gomes Bezerra Filho Ligia Kerr Carl Kendall Raimunda Hermelinda Maia Macena Rosa Salani Mota Marcelo Ferreira Roberto da Justa Pires NetoAbout the authors

Abstract

The present study aims to identify the prevalence of physical violence against female prisoners in Brazil, as well as related factors. This is a cross-sectional national survey conducted in 15 female prisons in five regions of Brazil selected in multiple stages. The following types of analysis were performed: univariate analysis; stratified analysis relating the outcome (suffer physical violence inside prison) to predictor variables, using the Pearson chi-square test; calculation of the Odds Ratio (O.R.); and multiple logistic regression. The Hosmer-Lemeshow test was used for analysis of goodness of fit and adequacy of the model. The prevalence of physical violence inside female prisons was 37.4%. There was a correlation between physical violence victimization in prison and the following variables: physical victimization prior to arrest (p = 0.013), solitary confinement (p = 0.000), mental suffering (p = 0.003), current or previous abusive intake of alcohol (p = 0.011), current or previous injection of cocaine (p = 0.002) and not performing prison labor (p = 0.003). Physical violence has become inherent in the Brazilian female prison system. Continued studies are needed to monitor the situation and to develop interventions to prevent physical violence inside the facilities.

Key words
Physical violence; Prisons; Penal institutions; Female prisons

Resumo

O presente artigo objetiva identificar a prevalência de violência física no interior das prisões femininas brasileiras, bem como fatores associados. Estudo transversal de abrangência nacional, realizado em 15 unidades prisionais femininas nas cinco regiões do Brasil em amostra selecionada por múltiplos estágios. Realizou-se análise univariada; análise estratificada em relação ao desfecho (sofrer violência física dentro da prisão) e as variáveis preditoras através do teste de Chi-quadrado de Pearson; cálculo da Odds Ratio; e regressão logística múltipla. Utilizou-se o teste Hosmer-Lemeshow para análise de qualidade de ajuste e adequação do modelo. A prevalência de violência física dentro das prisões femininas brasileiras foi de 37.4%. Houve correlação entre a vitimização da violência física na prisão e as seguintes variáveis: vitimização física prévia (p = 0.013), isolamento (p = 0.000), sofrimento mental (p = 0.003), ingestão abusiva e/ou dependência alcoólica (p = 0.011), uso atual ou prévio de cocaína injetável (p = 0.002) e ócio prisional (p = 0.003). A violência física tornou-se inerente ao sistema prisional feminino brasileiro. Estudos futuros são necessários no intuito de fornecer propostas para intervenções efetivas de modo a prevenir a violência física dentro das instalações prisionais.

Palavras-chave
Violência física; Prisões; Instituições penais; Prisões femininas

Introduction

Physical violence inside prisons is a prevalent phenomenon worldwide11 Wolff N, Jing S, Bachman R. Measuring victimization inside prisons: questioning the questions. Journal of Interpersonal Violence 2008; 23(10):1343-1362.

2 Wooldredge J, Steiner B. Violent victimization among state prison inmates. Violence Victimization 2013; 28(3):531-551.
-33 Sung HE. Prevalence and risk factors of violence-related and accident-related injuries among state prisoners. J Correct Health Care 2010; 16(3):178-187.. Nevertheless, frequent reports uncover severe violations against female inmates’ emotional and physical integrity. Violence against women is defined as "any act of gender-based violence that results in, or is likely to result in, physical, sexual or mental harm or suffering to women, including threats of such acts, coercion or arbitrary deprivation of liberty, whether occurring in public or in private life"44 Garcia-Moreno C, Heise L, Henrica AFMJ, Ellsberg M, Watts C. Violence against women. Science 2005; 310(5752):1282-1283..

More than 625,000 women and girls are held in penal institutions around the world for preventive reasons or for conviction55 Walmsley R. World female imprisonment list: women and girls in penal institutions, including pre-trial detainees/remand prisoners. 2nd ed. London: International Centre for Prison Studies; 2006., and this specific population experiences more frequent and severe situations of interpersonal violence than the general female population66 Kelly PJ, Cheng AL, Spencer-Carver E, Ramaswamy M. A syndemic model of women incarcerated in community jails. Public Health Nursing 2014; 31(2):118-125.

7 Fuentes CM. Nobody’s child: the role of trauma and interpersonal violence in women’s pathways to incarceration and resultant service needs. Med Anthropol Q 2014; 28(1):85-104.

8 Perez DM, Gover AR, Tennyson KM, Santos SD. Individual and institutional characteristics related to inmate victimization. Int J Offender Ther Comp Criminol 2014; 54(3):378-394.

9 Byrd PM, Davis JL. Violent Behavior in Female Inmates Possible Predictors. J Journal of Interpersonal Violence 2008; 24(2):379-392.
-1010 De Ravello L, Abeita J, Brown P. Breaking the cycle/mending the hoop: adverse childhood experiences among incarcerated American Indian/Alaska Native women in New Mexico. Health Care Women Int 2008; 29(3):300-315..

Nearly one-third of them are incarcerated in the United States, China, Russia and Brazil55 Walmsley R. World female imprisonment list: women and girls in penal institutions, including pre-trial detainees/remand prisoners. 2nd ed. London: International Centre for Prison Studies; 2006.. The Brazilian female prison population grew by 567% between 2000 and 2014, while the general growth rate of the prison population was 119% in the same period1111 Brasil. Levantamento Nacional de Informações Penitenciárias. Brasília: Departamento Penitenciário Nacional; 2014.. Among the specificities of the Brazilian prison system, the institutionalization of gender violence is a classic problem, arising from the imposition of a penal and prison system that is culturally androcentric66 Kelly PJ, Cheng AL, Spencer-Carver E, Ramaswamy M. A syndemic model of women incarcerated in community jails. Public Health Nursing 2014; 31(2):118-125.,77 Fuentes CM. Nobody’s child: the role of trauma and interpersonal violence in women’s pathways to incarceration and resultant service needs. Med Anthropol Q 2014; 28(1):85-104.,99 Byrd PM, Davis JL. Violent Behavior in Female Inmates Possible Predictors. J Journal of Interpersonal Violence 2008; 24(2):379-392.,1414 Scherer ZAP, Scherer EA, Stefanini JR, Cocenas SA. Mulheres detentas e suas vivências acerca da violência no cárcere. Oralidades 2011; 5(9):59-73.,1616 Muftic LR, Bouffard JA, Bouffard LA. An exploratory study of women arrested for intimate partner violence: violent women or violent resistance? Journal of Interpersonal Violence 2007; 22(6):753-74..

Research indicates a significant association between a woman experiencing episodes of physical violence and her violent behavior reproduced in prison. These data shed light on the question of female imprisonment and report an aspect of these women’s lives, revealed in a universe of suffered and perpetrated violence previously described in a few studies66 Kelly PJ, Cheng AL, Spencer-Carver E, Ramaswamy M. A syndemic model of women incarcerated in community jails. Public Health Nursing 2014; 31(2):118-125.,77 Fuentes CM. Nobody’s child: the role of trauma and interpersonal violence in women’s pathways to incarceration and resultant service needs. Med Anthropol Q 2014; 28(1):85-104.,99 Byrd PM, Davis JL. Violent Behavior in Female Inmates Possible Predictors. J Journal of Interpersonal Violence 2008; 24(2):379-392.,1515 Brasil. CPI do Sistema Carcerário. Brasília: Biblioteca Digital da Câmara dos Deputados; 2009..

Therefore, it seems that inmates who suffered physical violence are more vulnerable to repeat these experiences in adult life, as victims or authors99 Byrd PM, Davis JL. Violent Behavior in Female Inmates Possible Predictors. J Journal of Interpersonal Violence 2008; 24(2):379-392.,1010 De Ravello L, Abeita J, Brown P. Breaking the cycle/mending the hoop: adverse childhood experiences among incarcerated American Indian/Alaska Native women in New Mexico. Health Care Women Int 2008; 29(3):300-315.. Nonetheless, there are few studies on institutional violence among female inmates66 Kelly PJ, Cheng AL, Spencer-Carver E, Ramaswamy M. A syndemic model of women incarcerated in community jails. Public Health Nursing 2014; 31(2):118-125.,88 Perez DM, Gover AR, Tennyson KM, Santos SD. Individual and institutional characteristics related to inmate victimization. Int J Offender Ther Comp Criminol 2014; 54(3):378-394.,1414 Scherer ZAP, Scherer EA, Stefanini JR, Cocenas SA. Mulheres detentas e suas vivências acerca da violência no cárcere. Oralidades 2011; 5(9):59-73.,1717 Blitz CL, Wolff N, Shi J. Physical victimization in prison: the role of mental illness. Int J Law Psychiatry 2008; 31(5):385-393.

18 Wolff N, Shi J. Patterns of Victimization and Feelings of Safety Inside Prison: The Experience of Male and Female Inmates. Crime & Delinquency 2011; 57(1):29-55.

19 Ely A, Cechine lB, Camargo M. Entre vítimas e criminosas: estudo sobre o histórico de violência na vida das mulheres em situação de detenção no presídio Santa Augusta, Criciúma-SC. Seminário de Ciências Sociais Aplicadas 2010; 2:2.
-2020 Wolff N, Blitz CL, Shi J, Siegel J, Bachman R. Physical violence inside prisons: Rates of victimization. Criminal Justice and Behavior 2017; 34(5):588-599. and research that examines the epidemiology and context of physical violence inside prisons is almost nonexistent1818 Wolff N, Shi J. Patterns of Victimization and Feelings of Safety Inside Prison: The Experience of Male and Female Inmates. Crime & Delinquency 2011; 57(1):29-55.. Subsequently, this study aims to identify the physical violence suffered by women in female prisons in Brazil, as well as its associated factors.

Materials and methods

A Cross-sectional analytical study of the project "National survey on the health of female prison population and female prison officers" was developed in 15 female prison units in the states of Pará and Rondônia (North Region), Ceará (Northeast Region), Federal District and Mato Grosso (Central-West Region), São Paulo and Minas Gerais (Southern Region), Paraná and Rio Grande do Sul (South Region) from January 2013 to December 2015.

Study population and sample

The population investigated was comprised of incarcerated women in Brazilian prison system (N = 22,496) in 259 female prison facilities in 2012 according to INFOPEN database (Statistical Information of the Brazilian Penitentiary System). Sampling was performed in multiple stages: 1) Initially, the two states that had the largest female prison populations were intentionally selected by region; 2) Prisons were stratified considering the number of inmates by state, capital, metropolitan region and countryside; 3) Prisons with more than 75 residents were included in the sample plan, due to their obligation of having health services2121 Brasil. Lei no 7.210, de 11 de Julho de 1984. Institui a Lei de Execução Penal. Diário Oficial da União 1984; 13 jul., in addition 4/5 of female prisons in Brazil are located in prisons with more than 75 inmates; 4) On this stage 24 prisons were selected involving 10,668 female inmates separated by five Brazilian regions; 5) Then 30% of violence inside the prison was estimated22 Wooldredge J, Steiner B. Violent victimization among state prison inmates. Violence Victimization 2013; 28(3):531-551. considering a level of significance 95%, power 80%.

The initial sample size comprised 1,861 female inmates.

Then, sample size composed was randomly selected using the Intemodino Group random number generator2222 Intemodino.com [Internet]. Czech Republic: Random number generator; 2007. [cited 2013 Jan 23]. Available from: https://intemodino.com/
Intemodino.com...
, and the identification was done through the nominal listing provided in each prison unit. Women who were unable to attend the research for any reason such as administrative custody, isolated or sick to participate on the day the survey was conducted, or lack of fluency in the Portuguese language were excluded from the sample.

There was an 8.3% loss in the initial selection (n = 154), due to the actual number of female inmates found in prison at the time of data collection, 10.5% withdrawal or refusal (n = 195) and impossibility of reaching some prisons facilities and another obstacles resulted in a lack of 9.9% missing data (n = 185). In the end, 1327 female inmates were approached.

Therefore, a Complex Survey Data (CSD) was performed based on adjustment the weights in each stratum previous selected for determinate population correction where the clusters are sampled without replacement and also to correct the population number of female prisoners in Brazil updated from 2012 to 2014 according to INFOPEN database2323 StataCorp, LP. Stata Survey Data Reference Manual, Release 9, College Station, Texas: Stata Press Publication; 2005..

Data collection

The Data were collected through self-applied questionnaires, using the Audio Computer-Assisted Self-Interviewing (ACASI) technology using a 10’’ tablet. The choice of ACASI was due to its applicability in studies which need sensitive approach, private and health risk behaviors information2424 Gorbach PM, Mensch BS, Husnik M, Astou C, Benoit M, Makanani B, Nkhoma C, a Chinula L, Tembo T, Mierzwa S, Reynolds K, Hurst S, Coletti A, Forsyth A. Effect of computer-assisted interviewing on self-reported sexual behavior data in a microbicide clinical trial. AIDS and Behavior 2013; 17(2):790-800.. The option "I do not know or I do not want to answering" was added in all questions due to no obligation to answer.

The definition of the outcome variable (physical violence) was characterized in Law no. 11,340/06 (Law that provides mechanisms to curb domestic and family violence against women in Brazil.) and in the ICD-10 (International Statistical Classification of Diseases and Related Problems, chapter "Assaults" (X85-Y09).) classification2525 Laurenti R. Accidents and acts of violence/lesions and poisonings and the 10th revision of the International Classification of Diseases. Rev Saude Publica 1997; 31(4):55-58.. Questions related to physical violence victimization experienced before and during the imprisonment were expressed in four questions, later grouped for analysis.

"Has anyone ever slapped you, pushed, pinched or pulled your hair to hurt you?" (Y04: Assault through physical strength.)

"Has anyone ever slapped, beaten, burned or tried to hang you?" (Y04: Assault through physical strength; X91: Assault by means of hanging, strangulation and suffocation.)

"Has anyone ever injured you with a knife, another piercing object (Stanley knife, glass shard, etc.) to hurt you?" (X99: aggression by means of sharp or penetrating object; Y00: aggression through a blunt instrument)

"Has anyone ever injured you with a revolver or another firearm, besides other objects that caused injury to hurt you?" (X93 : aggression by means of hand firearm shooting; X94: aggression by shotgun, carbine or larger caliber firearm; X95: aggression by shooting from another firearm or unspecified weapon.)

Predictive variables comprised: profile, prison history, alcohol consumption, tobacco, prescribed drugs, illicit drugs and mental suffering. Profile was accessed by age, education level, race/skin color, religion and marital status (self-reported following criteria set forth in Brazil). Prison history reported number of arrests, reason for current arrest, number of people in the same cell, solitary confinement and prison labor in the facility.

The Alcohol Use Disorders Identification Test (AUDIT) was used to identify different alcohol consumption patterns among female prisoners. The AUDIT is comprised of 10 items and evaluates recent use and alcohol consumption-related problems, in addition to dependence symptoms2626 Martins RA, Manzatto AJ, Cruz LN, Poiate SMG, Scarin ACCF. The use of Alcohol Use Disorders Identification Test (Audit) to Identify Alcohol Use among High School Students. Interamerican Journal of Psychology 2008; 42(2):307-316.. The classification of alcohol consumption was stratified into low risk and risk/high risk. Low risk consumption is related to prisoners who obtained 0-7 scores and risk either high risk is related to those who obtained 8 or above scores.

Tobacco consumption was measured through following questions: Have you ever-smoked cigarettes?; How many cigarettes do you smoke a day?; How often you smoke?; How long time you take to smoke since you wake up in the morning?; Does it difficult for you not smoking in not allowed places?; Do you smoke even when you are sick? ; Is there smokers sharing the cell with you? However, only smoking practice was considered as a predicted variable on this study.

Prescribed drugs include benzodiazepines and tranquilizers and illicit drugs comprised marijuana, cocaine (aspirated and/or injectable), ecstasy, LSD, crack, oxidato or oxi (Oxidato or oxi is a highly addictive and hallucinogenic blend of cocaine paste, gasoline, kerosene and quicklime (calcium oxide)2727 Silva Junior RC, Gomes CS, Goulart Júnior SS, Almeida FV, Grobério TS, Braga JWB, Zacca JJ, Vieira ML, Botelho ED, Maldaner AO. Demystifying “oxi” cocaine: Chemical profiling analysis of a “new Brazilian drug” from Acre State. Forensic Science International 2012; 221(1):113-119.), opioids and solvents.

Self-Reporting Questionnaire-20 (SRQ-20) was used to measure the levels of suspicion of mental suffering. The instrument is comprised of 20 questions, the first four of which are related to physical symptoms, and the other 16 to psycho-emotional ones. The application of SRQ-20 allow the early detection of signs and symptom of mental health compromise, including fatigue, insomnia, irritability, as well as subclinical aspects. It is highly recommended, for population-based studies, especially in groups of worker, in view of the association of signs and symptoms with the reduction of working and social roles. Since it is a tracking instrument, the determination of cut-off points for the detection of cases is fundamental to guarantee sensitivity and specificity. In this study, we adopted the minimum score of 7 affirmative responses to SRQ-20 for CO’s, in conformity with the guidelines set forth for women2828 De Jesus Mari J, Williams P. A validity study of a psychiatric screening questionnaire (SRQ-20) in primary care in the city of São Paulo. Br J Psychiatry 1986; 148(1):23-26.

Data Analysis

The data were analyzed using Stata® version 11. The Complex Survey Data (CSD) was applied to adjust the sample loss. The CSD is composed of survey data from the survey design, variables to identify information about the strata, clusters, sampling weights, and population correction. Sampling weights was carried out for precise adjustment estimates. Weighting, clustering, and stratification are considered on survey design to minimize standard errors2323 StataCorp, LP. Stata Survey Data Reference Manual, Release 9, College Station, Texas: Stata Press Publication; 2005..

Descriptive statistic analyses were calculated for outcome physical violence victimization inside prison and the predictable variables, which comprises: profile, prison history, alcohol consumption, tobacco, prescribed drugs, illicit drugs and mental suffering. Crude and adjusted logistic regression analyses were performed to assess association the violence outcome and the predictive variables using Pearson’s chi-squared test. Predictive variables within increased the probability for suffering physical violence inside the prison up to 20% were taken to the final Logistic Regression model In order to control confounding factors, the odds ratios and 95% confidence intervals were estimated. The Hosmer-Lemeshow test was used for analysis of goodness of fit and adequacy of the model.

The research was approved by the Committee of Ethics in Research under protocol 188.211. Since this research involves human beings, all participants agreed with and signed the Free and Informed Consent Form.

Results

The sample collected consisted of 1,327 women held in the prison units of the following investigated states: Pará (n = 181), Rondônia (n = 40), Ceará (n = 164), Mato Grosso (n = 39), Minas Gerais (n = 206), Rio Grande do Sul (n = 100), Paraná (n = 139), São Paulo (n = 304), and the Federal District (n = 154).

Women participants were mostly younger being under 34 years of age (62.3%). The sociodemographic profile is presented as follows: The majority non-white (71.1%) and had received less than secondary education (78.9%); more than a half (59.5%) arrested for drug trafficking and 16.7% theft or robbery; almost half (47.5%) also reported previous incarceration; share a cell with 6 people or more (67.7%); 41.9% were christians and 37.2% protestant .The majority was mothers (79.9%), having paid legal occupation prior prison (75.6%) (Table 1).

Table 1
Socioeconomic and prison profile of female prison population in Brazil inside prisons in 8 Brazilian states and the Federal District, 2013-2015.

The prevalence of physical violence inside Brazilian female prisons was 37.4%. In relation to the perpetrators, the prisoners themselves were the most accused (67%), followed by prison officers (21.9%). Among these victims, 67.5% reported having received health care inside the prison unit. As for first aid, in case of more severe violence, the prison officers were the first ones to be approached (28.4%), followed by the nurse (23.7%) and the female inmates themselves (18.3%). Almost one third (29.2%) had already been taken to the solitary confinement as an institutional punishment. The majority (81,9%) reported physical violence prior incarceration (Table 2).

Table 2
Typology of violence against the female prison population in Brazil inside prisons in 8 Brazilian states and the Federal District, 2013-2015.

The following factors were correlated with violence inside the prison: having suffered physical violence in life before arrest (p = 0.000); having a "stable" (i.e., steady) partner (p = 0.009), imprisonment for reasons other than drug trafficking (p = 0.003), having been taken to solitary confinement (p = 0.000), not performing paid labor in the facility (p = 0.000), history of abusive intake of alcohol (p = 0.002), smoking tobacco (p = 0.019), marijuana (p = 0.007), injecting cocaine (p = 0.003), benzodiazepines (p = 0.000), tranquilizers (p = 0.000) and mental suffering diagnosis (p = 0,000) (Table 3).

Table 3
Profile, prison history, consumption of alcohol, tobacco, other drugs and mental suffering significant associated with the typologies of violence suffered inside the prisons by the Brazilian female prison population in 8 Brazilian states and the Federal District after weighting the data, 2013-2015.

The multivariate logistic regression analysis by adjusted models demonstrated a possible association between physical violence victimization inside the prison and the following variables: physical victimization prior to imprisonment (p = 0,013), being taken to solitary confinement (p = 0.000), a positive diagnosis for mental suffering (p = 0.003), current or abusive intake of alcohol / alcohol dependence (p = 0.011), current or previous injecting cocaine use (p = 0.002) and not performing labor in the facility (p = 0.003) (Table 4).

Table 4
Logistic regression about the physical violence victimization inside the prison and possible related factors, according to the Brazilian female prison population in 8 Brazilian states and the Federal District, after weighting the data, 2013-2015.

The Hosmer-Lemeshow chi-square (goodness-of-fit) test was not statistically significant (p = 0.9893), thus, the proposed model is consistent and adequate to explain the observed outcome.

Discussion

It was found that the Brazilian female prisoners have experienced physical violence not only during (37.4%) but also prior incarceration (81.9%). Those experiences were associated to multiple forms of violence, poverty, alcohol / another drugs abuse, and mental suffering. The rates of violence inside prison are high since the prisoners must be protected by the State under human rights law2929 França MHDO. Criminalidade e prisão feminina: uma analise da questão de gênero. Revista Ártemis 2014; 18(1):212-228.. This fact is supportive to another studies in literature, which asserts that violence and aggression belong to prison defined as a territory of psychological and physical torture11 Wolff N, Jing S, Bachman R. Measuring victimization inside prisons: questioning the questions. Journal of Interpersonal Violence 2008; 23(10):1343-1362.,99 Byrd PM, Davis JL. Violent Behavior in Female Inmates Possible Predictors. J Journal of Interpersonal Violence 2008; 24(2):379-392.,3030 Walsh K, Gonsalves VM, Scalora MJ, King S, Hardyman PL. Child maltreatment histories among female inmates reporting inmate on inmate sexual victimization in prison: the mediating role of emotion dysregulation. Journal of Interpersonal Violence 2012; 27(3):492-512.. The finds were consistent with another study also reporting violence inside female prison in United States which found a prevalence of 39.5%11 Wolff N, Jing S, Bachman R. Measuring victimization inside prisons: questioning the questions. Journal of Interpersonal Violence 2008; 23(10):1343-1362..

Concerning to physical violence aggressors, inmate-on-inmate violence were the most mentioned (67%) followed by officer-on-inmate (21.9%). Although inmate-on-inmate violence was more frequent in this study, surveys carried out in Brazilian prison units showed that aggressions are committed, in large part, by prison officers1313 Rampim TTD. Mulher e sistema penitenciário: a institucionalização da violência de gênero. In: Borges PCC. Sistema penal e gênero: tópicos para a emancipação feminina. São Paulo: Cultura Acadêmica; 2011. p. 35.,1919 Ely A, Cechine lB, Camargo M. Entre vítimas e criminosas: estudo sobre o histórico de violência na vida das mulheres em situação de detenção no presídio Santa Augusta, Criciúma-SC. Seminário de Ciências Sociais Aplicadas 2010; 2:2..

According to Scherer et al.1414 Scherer ZAP, Scherer EA, Stefanini JR, Cocenas SA. Mulheres detentas e suas vivências acerca da violência no cárcere. Oralidades 2011; 5(9):59-73., a study carried out in a female prison in the countryside of São Paulo, the prison is scenery of multiple forms of violence caused by prison officers, of both sexes, who acts severely causing fear and intimidation to the female inmates. Officer-on-inmate violence is used instead of rehabilitation which violence goes against the duties of the National Penitentiary Department (DEPEN)3131 Brasil. Manual do Agente Penitenciário. Brasília: Departamento Penitenciário Nacional; 2003..

Serra3232 Serra CHA. Estado penal e encarceramento em massa no Brasil. In: Lourenço LC, Gomes GLR, organizadores. Prisões e punição no Brasil contemporâneo. Salvador: EDUFBA; 2013. p. 29-44. explains that corporal punishment, torture, and other punitive practices are historical in Brazilian society and have persisted for centuries, which shows that the Brazilian society has not yet renounced rigorous and severe punishment. The author establishes that as punitive practices are not aligned with the existing criminal codes, therefore, a "long-term interdisciplinary theoretical-methodological approach" is needed to try to assimilate the punitive logic in the Brazilian social formation.

Regarding violence prior incarceration, the currently study showed that 81.9% of the interviewees suffered some type of physical violence, either as children, adolescents and/or adults. This percentage is high compared to physical violence among Brazilian women, which is 30% according to Schraiber et al.3333 Schraiber LB, D’Oliveira AFPL, França-Junior I, Diniz S, Portella AP, Ludermir AB, Valença O, Couto MT. Prevalence of intimate partner violence against women in regions of Brazil. Rev Saude Publica 2007; 41(5):797-807. emphasizing a lifetime victimization of the female prison population.

The multivariate analysis considered a possible factors associated to the woman who suffer physical violence inside the prisons: physical violence at some point in life before going to prison, mental suffering, history of alcohol and other drugs abuse, and no labor activity inside the prison. Researches indicate a significant association between a woman experiencing episodes of physical violence and her violent behavior reproduced in prison. Therefore, it seems that inmates who suffered physical violence are more vulnerable to repeat these experiences in adult life, as victims or authors99 Byrd PM, Davis JL. Violent Behavior in Female Inmates Possible Predictors. J Journal of Interpersonal Violence 2008; 24(2):379-392.,1010 De Ravello L, Abeita J, Brown P. Breaking the cycle/mending the hoop: adverse childhood experiences among incarcerated American Indian/Alaska Native women in New Mexico. Health Care Women Int 2008; 29(3):300-315..

In terms of alcohol abuse and to physical violence victimization inside prisons, the current study observed a prevalence of 37.3%. Such numbers are higher than the average of abusive consumption of alcohol by the Brazilian population (13.7%)3434 Garcia LP, Freitas LRSD. Consumo abusivo de álcool no Brasil: resultados da Pesquisa Nacional de Saúde 2013. Epidemiologia e Serviços de Saúde 2015; 24(2):227-237.. Mullings et al.3535 Mullings JL, Hartley DJ, Marquart JW. Exploring the relationship between alcohol use, childhood maltreatment, and treatment needs among female prisoners. Subst Use Misuse 2004; 39(2):277-305. using the same classification to detect alcohol abuse (AUDIT) among female prisoners in the state of Texas, found the prevalence of 40%. There is a greater chance that these alcohol-dependent women have grown up in a dysfunctional family context, with problems related to their family members’ use of alcohol and / or other drugs, as well as neglect, physical and sexual abuse in childhood.

Mental suffering was also related to physical violence among inmates. Pereira et al.3636 Pereira DA, Marques MF, Hübner CVK, Silva KJF. Sintomas depressivos e abuso de drogas entre mulheres presas na cadeia pública feminina de Votorantim/SP. Revista da Faculdade de Ciências Médicas de Sorocaba 2014; 16(2):71-75., found the prevalence of 80% of women diagnosed with moderate to severe depression in a prison unit in São Paulo. Also, Logan and Blackburn3737 Logan C, Blackburn R. Mental disorder in violent women in secure settings: potential relevance to risk for future violence. Int J Law Psychiatry 2009; 32(1):31-38. detected that women incarcerated by violent act were four times more likely to be diagnosed with mental disorder than those who committed less severe violence. Therefore, it is suggested that this population is more likely to develop mental suffering among other psychic disorders. That is, such a cyclical mechanism that results in the imprisonment of women seems to be related to violence in childhood, alcohol, drugs, violence in adulthood, aggression and other victimizing conditions.

Drug consumption was strongly associated with suffering violence inside prison. Dias3838 Dias CNA. Regulação dos conflitos pelo PCC no interior das prisões paulistas: redução da violência física, interdependência e controle social. In: Lourenço LC, Gomes GLR, organizadores. Prisões e punição no Brasil contemporâneo. Salvador: EDUFBA ; 2013. p. 77-97., inside São Paulo prisons in Brazil, reaffirms the link between drug-related debts and the outbreak of the cycle of violence. It is noteworthy that almost 60% of the women interviewed in this study had been arrested for drug trafficking. This finding corroborates the average national imprisonment of women for this crime. Based on data compiled in 2016, women have a higher incidence of imprisonment for crimes related to trafficking: 62% against 26% of men3939 Santos T, Rosa MI, organizadores. Levantamento nacional de Informações Penitenciárias. INFOPEN Mulheres. 2ª ed. Brasília: Departamento Penitenciário Nacional ; 2017. and drug trafficking has become, in recent years, the activity that most destines women to imprisonment in Brazil.

Studies aimed at drug trafficking policy and drug use inside prisons are scarce, probably because they constitute illegal acts. However, Soares and Ilgenfritz1212 Soares BM, Ilgenfritz I. Prisioneiras : vida e violência atrás das grades. Rio de Janeiro: Garamond; 2002., in an interview with a prison officer of female unit, revealed the existence of a mentality rooted in the prison system that the drug would be necessary to improve the psychological state, at least for a period, and to calm the inmates.

Overall, the study found that the general profile of women incarcerated in Brazil corroborates other comprehensive national and international studies66 Kelly PJ, Cheng AL, Spencer-Carver E, Ramaswamy M. A syndemic model of women incarcerated in community jails. Public Health Nursing 2014; 31(2):118-125.

7 Fuentes CM. Nobody’s child: the role of trauma and interpersonal violence in women’s pathways to incarceration and resultant service needs. Med Anthropol Q 2014; 28(1):85-104.

8 Perez DM, Gover AR, Tennyson KM, Santos SD. Individual and institutional characteristics related to inmate victimization. Int J Offender Ther Comp Criminol 2014; 54(3):378-394.

9 Byrd PM, Davis JL. Violent Behavior in Female Inmates Possible Predictors. J Journal of Interpersonal Violence 2008; 24(2):379-392.
-1010 De Ravello L, Abeita J, Brown P. Breaking the cycle/mending the hoop: adverse childhood experiences among incarcerated American Indian/Alaska Native women in New Mexico. Health Care Women Int 2008; 29(3):300-315.,1313 Rampim TTD. Mulher e sistema penitenciário: a institucionalização da violência de gênero. In: Borges PCC. Sistema penal e gênero: tópicos para a emancipação feminina. São Paulo: Cultura Acadêmica; 2011. p. 35.

14 Scherer ZAP, Scherer EA, Stefanini JR, Cocenas SA. Mulheres detentas e suas vivências acerca da violência no cárcere. Oralidades 2011; 5(9):59-73.

15 Brasil. CPI do Sistema Carcerário. Brasília: Biblioteca Digital da Câmara dos Deputados; 2009.

16 Muftic LR, Bouffard JA, Bouffard LA. An exploratory study of women arrested for intimate partner violence: violent women or violent resistance? Journal of Interpersonal Violence 2007; 22(6):753-74.

17 Blitz CL, Wolff N, Shi J. Physical victimization in prison: the role of mental illness. Int J Law Psychiatry 2008; 31(5):385-393.

18 Wolff N, Shi J. Patterns of Victimization and Feelings of Safety Inside Prison: The Experience of Male and Female Inmates. Crime & Delinquency 2011; 57(1):29-55.

19 Ely A, Cechine lB, Camargo M. Entre vítimas e criminosas: estudo sobre o histórico de violência na vida das mulheres em situação de detenção no presídio Santa Augusta, Criciúma-SC. Seminário de Ciências Sociais Aplicadas 2010; 2:2.
-2020 Wolff N, Blitz CL, Shi J, Siegel J, Bachman R. Physical violence inside prisons: Rates of victimization. Criminal Justice and Behavior 2017; 34(5):588-599. which comprehend young women between 18 and 30 years of age, non-white, low education, convicted for drug trafficking, and unmarried (although the marital status indication is quite variable and not precise by definition).

In terms of education, 64.9% of the interviewed women had less than nine years of study, while the overall of Brazilian women with less than 9 years of study was 48.7%, according to PNAD 20094040 Instituto Brasileiro de Geografia e Estatística (IBGE). Pesquisa Nacional por Amostra de Domicílios (PNAD): síntese de indicadores 2009. Rio de Janeiro: IBGE; 2010. [acessado 2015 Out 2]. Disponível em: http://www.ibge.gov.br/home/estatistica/populacao/trabalhoerendimento/pnad2009/pnad_sintese_2009.pdf
http://www.ibge.gov.br/home/estatistica/...
. Studies show that the female prison population comes essentially from the less favored strata of society, with the lowest levels of education4141 Peltan JR, Cellucci T. Childhood sexual abuse and substance abuse treatment utilization among substance-dependent incarcerated women. J Subst Abuse Treat 2011; 41(3):215-224.,4242 Lewis CF. Childhood antecedents of adult violent offending in a group of female felons. Behav Sci Law 2010; 28(2):224-234.. Due to the low level of education of most of the interviewees, it was difficult to handle the technology of the tablet during the application of the self-interview instrument. Therefore, the interviewers assisted them by reading the questions and answers and, at other times, also by marking the answers according to the interviewee’s testimony. However, this fact may have led to limitations in this study.

In addition, the data presented may be underestimated in relation to the concrete reality experienced by these women, both before and during the imprisonment. The constant presence of prison officers at interview sites may have inhibited women’s speech, either for fear repression or retaliation from prison officers, as well as intimidation and / or prejudice from other inmates. Because of that, there was also a need to restructure the questions of the violence component so that the answers did not lead to a possible report or confession, offering risk to the interviewee inside the prison unit.

Finally, these data expose the issue of female imprisonment in Brazil by unveiling a universe of suffered and perpetrated violence. Such patterns of violence were experienced before, during and after imprisonment, when another stigma is added to the trajectory of these women. Thus, the prison system diverges from the real meaning of imprisonment, failing to fight crime and violence in society by spreading the violence within institutions that, in fact, are supposed to extinguish it. This fact often reiterates the violent course and the continuity of women in the world of crime.

Several laws and policies aimed at the re-socialization of women were cited throughout the research. Such laws are designed to ensure the physical and mental integrity of female prisoners. However, such policies and laws are not put in practice. When the outcome is incarceration, the state should be responsible for providing all the health care that is inherent to that individual, including the promotion of physical and mental integrity. Nonetheless, the data show the non-fulfillment of the duties of the State. It gets clearer and clearer that the violence inside prison in the life of these women is being reaffirmed.

By identifying, in this research, the cycle of violence and revictimization suffered by women in penal institutions, it is suggested that collective actions targeting these women be carried out in order to identify their vulnerabilities and take steps to prevent violence inside the institutions. However, such actions will only be effective with the participation and technical and humanized training of the whole female institutional penitentiary sector in order to break the popular punitive logic and the trend of institutionalized punitive rigidity.

Conclusion

The vulnerability of incarcerated women with a history of alcoholism, the use of psychoactive substances, mental suffering and a history of violence throughout their lives are evident. The lack of support for alcohol and drug addicts inside many prisons opens up gaps for the spread of violence. In addition, the absence of such health supports constitutes institutional violence.

It is necessary to expand the discussion and promote studies on this subject with emphasis on interdisciplinary approaches in the Brazilian prison units. This way, concrete subsidies will be provided in the constitution of a theoretical body that will guide proposals for effective intervention in the Brazilian female prison units.

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Publication Dates

  • Publication in this collection
    03 Feb 2020
  • Date of issue
    Feb 2020

History

  • Received
    24 Jan 2018
  • Accepted
    22 May 2018
  • Published
    24 May 2018
ABRASCO - Associação Brasileira de Saúde Coletiva Rio de Janeiro - RJ - Brazil
E-mail: revscol@fiocruz.br