Prison and Jail Deaths in Custody 200-2009, DOJ BJS, 2011
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U.S. Department of Justice Office of Justice Programs Bureau of Justice Statistics December 2011, NCJ 236219 by Margaret E. Noonan and E. Ann Carson, BJS Statisticians T his report provides an update to annual tables based on the Bureau of Justice Statistics’ (BJS) Deaths in Custody Reporting Program (DCRP), a data collection that measures inmate mortality data in state prisons and local jails by the number and causes of deaths. In 2008, 960 inmates died in U.S. jails (a mortality rate of 123 deaths per 100,000 jail inmates). In 2009, 948 inmates died in U.S. jails (a rate of 127 deaths per 100,000 jail inmates). State prison facilities reported 3,452 inmate deaths in 2008 (a rate of 260 deaths per 100,000 prison inmates) and 3,408 inmate deaths in 2009 (257 deaths per 100,000 prison inmates). Consistent with data from previous years, local jail deaths constituted approximately 25% of inmate deaths in adult correctional facilities nationwide. The number of inmate deaths in jails increased each year between 2000 and 2007 (from 904 to 1,102 inmate deaths), increasing 22% during this period. In 2008, the number of deaths in jails declined 13% to 960 inmate deaths, and decreased an additional 1% in 2009 to 948 deaths (figure 1). The decline in 2008 was the first decline in jail mortality data since BJS began collecting data annually for the DCRP in 2000. From 2007 to 2008, 918 jails reported a change in the number of deaths to the DCRP. Among these jails, 324 reported a total increase of 452 deaths and 402 jails reported a total decrease of 594 deaths, for a net decrease of 142 deaths in 2008. The majority of jails reporting a decline (74%) registered one less death in 2008 than in 2007. Nine jails reported a total decrease of 69 deaths (12% of the total decline). All nine of these jails held at least 2,500 inmates on an average day in 2007 and 2008. In general, the number of deaths in state prisons rose each year between 2001 and 2008 (from 2,877 to 3,452 inmate deaths), a 20% increase (figure 2). In 2009, the number of deaths in prisons dropped to 3,408, a 1% decrease. Statistical tables in this report detail prison and jail deaths in custody. The tables present mortality data by cause of death, selected decedent characteristics, and state. Figure 1 Jail inmate deaths in custody, 2000–2009 Figure 2 Prison inmate deaths in custody, 2001–2009 Number of deaths Number of deaths 1,200 1,000 Rate per 100,000 inmates Mortality rate 160 4,000 Number Number Rate per 100,000 inmates Mortality rate Bureau of Justice Statistics · Statistical Tables Prison and Jail Deaths in Custody, 2000-2009 - Statistical Tables 300 120 3,000 225 80 2,000 150 40 1,000 75 800 600 400 200 0 2000 2001 2002 2003 2004 2005 2006 2007 2008 2009 0 0 2001 2002 2003 2004 2005 2006 2007 2008 2009 0 BJS SUMMARY FINDINGS: Jails Cause of death After increasing an average of 3% annually between 2000 and 2007, the number of inmate deaths in jails declined 13% in 2008. In 2009, the number of jail deaths remained relatively stable (down 1% from 2008) (table 1). Among the causes of inmate deaths in jails, AIDS-related deaths had the largest decline, decreasing by more than half (54%) between 2000 and 2009. Between 2000 and 2009, suicide (29%) and heart disease (22%) were the leading causes of deaths in jails, accounting for over half (51%) of all deaths in jails (table 2). Death by drug or alcohol intoxication (7%) was the third leading single cause of death in jails between 2000 and 2009. No other single cause of death accounted for more than 5% of jail deaths during this period. Suicide rates in jails dropped every year between 2001 and 2007 (from 49 to 36 deaths per 100,000), before increasing in 2009 (41 deaths per 100,000) (table 3). The jail mortality rate declined 13% between 2007 and 2008 (from 141 to 123 deaths per 100,000 jail inmates). The mortality rate increased in 2009 (127 deaths per 100,000), but this rate was still lower than the rate in 2007. Decedent characteristics Males constituted 88% of the jail population and 88% of jail deaths over the 10-year period. Females (132 deaths per 100,000) and males (141 deaths per 100,000) died at nearly equal rates between 2000 and 2009 (table 4). Whites (43% of the jail population) had a mortality rate in jails between 1.6 and 4.7 times that of any other race or ethnic group. American Indians and Alaska Natives accounted for about 2% of jail deaths, and Asians, Hawaiians, or other Pacific Islanders accounted for less than 1% of deaths in jails between 2000 and 2009 (table 5). State-level jail populations California, Texas, New York, and Florida reported 35% of all jail deaths. These states also had the largest jail populations and averaged 32% of the total jail average daily population reported to the DCRP between 2000 and 2009 (table 7). Between 2000 and 2009, nearly all (from 97% to 99%) of the approximately 2,800 jail jurisdictions in the U.S. submitted population and mortality data to the DCRP. These jurisdictions reported a total of 10,005 deaths over the ten-year period (table 9). Cause of death by decedent characteristics Males accounted for 98% of homicides in jails between 2000 and 2009 (table 11). Between 2000 and 2009, males committed suicide (43 deaths per 100,000) at a higher rate than females (27 deaths per 100,000) in jails. Over this period, males were 1.6 times more likely to die by suicide than females, and females were 1.7 times more likely to die by intoxication than males (table 12). Between 2000 and 2009, whites had the highest suicide rate in jail (80 deaths per 100,000). Hispanics/Latinos (25 deaths per 100,000) were 3 times less likely to commit suicide than whites in jails and 1.6 times more likely to commit suicide in jails than blacks/African Americans (16 deaths per 100,000). White, black/African American, and Hispanic/Latino inmates had equal homicide rates in jails (3 deaths per 100,000). In jails, the oldest inmates (age 55 or older) and the youngest inmates (age 17 or younger) had the highest suicide mortality rates (60 and 55 deaths per 100,000, respectively). Jail inmates age 55 or older were 3 times more likely than younger inmates to die of an accident. Between 2000 and 2009, jail inmates age 55 or older were between 5 and 7 times more likely to die than inmates age 54 or younger. During this period, the annual mortality rate for jail inmates age 55 or older ranged from 666 to 870 deaths per 100,000 (table 6). 2 Prison and Jail Deaths in Custody, 2000-2009 - Statistical Tables SUMMARY FINDINGS: prisons Cause of Death In general, the number of deaths in prisons increased each year between 2001 and 2008, increasing 20% during this period. Between 2008 and 2009, both the number of deaths and mortality rates remained relatively stable, declining 1% each (table 13). Among the causes of inmate deaths in prisons, AIDSrelated deaths had the largest decline (down 65%) between 2001 and 2009. Between 2001 and 2009, illness-related deaths accounted for 9 out of 10 prison deaths (table 14). Heart disease (26%) and cancer (23%) were the leading single causes of illness-related deaths in prisons, together accounting for nearly half (49%) of all prison deaths between 2001 and 2009. Liver disease was the third leading single cause of death in prisons, accounting for 7% of all deaths. Deaths due to intoxication, homicide, or accident were the least common causes of deaths, with none accounting for more than 2% of deaths in prisons. Decedent characteristics On average, males constituted 96% of the prison population over the 9-year period and 93% of all prison deaths (table 17). State-level prison populations All 50 (100%) state departments of corrections participated in the DCRP between 2001 and 2009 (table 20). California, Texas, Florida, and New York had the four largest correctional populations in the United States. They averaged 37% of the total prison population and reported 37% of deaths to the DCRP between 2001 and 2009. Cause of death by decedent characteristics Males accounted for more than 99% of prison homicides between 2001 and 2009 (table 23). With the exception of deaths due to drug or alcohol intoxication, American Indians, Alaska Natives, Asians, Hawaiians, or other Pacific Islanders each accounted for less than 1% of all deaths in prisons between 2001 and 2009. American Indians and Alaska Natives accounted for 3.1% of all drug or alcohol intoxication deaths in state prisons between 2001 and 2009. Males were twice as likely (19 deaths per 100,000) as females (8 deaths per 100,000) to die from liver disease. Males were 1.5 times more likely to commit suicide than females in prison between 2001 and 2009 (table 24). Prison inmates age 55 or older accounted for 41% of prison deaths but comprised 5% of the total prison population for the 9-year period. Blacks/African Americans accounted for 68% of AIDSrelated deaths and died from AIDS at a rate (21 per 100,000) that was three times that of whites (7 per 100,000) and twice that of Hispanics/Latinos (10 per 100,000) between 2001 and 2009. Whites made up 37% of the prison population and 50% of deaths in prisons between 2001 and 2009. White mortality rates were between 1.4 and 1.8 times higher than other race or ethnic groups during the 9-year period. Inmates age 55 or older had the highest mortality rates due to heart disease (664 deaths per 100,000), cancer (639 deaths per 100,000), and liver disease (113 deaths per 100,000) over the entire 9-year DCRP collection. Between 2001 and 2009, males in prisons died at rate of 260 deaths per 100,000, while females died at a rate of 153 deaths per 100,000 (table 19). Prison inmates age 55 or older had the highest homicide rate (8 deaths per 100,000), which was between 1.6 and 2.7 times higher than any other age group from 2001 to 2009. During the 9-year period of prison data collection, the annual mortality rates for inmates age 55 or older ranged between 2,007 and 2,500 deaths per 100,000. December 2011 3 List of Tables Table 1. Number of local jail inmate deaths, by cause of death, 2000-2009 Table 2. Percent of local jail inmate deaths, by cause of death, 2000-2009 Table 3. Mortality rate per 100,000 local jail inmates, by cause of death, 2000-2009 Table 4. Number of local jail inmate deaths, by selected characteristics, 2000-2009 Table 5. Percent of local jail inmate deaths, by selected characteristics, 2000-2009 Table 6. Mortality rate per 100,000 local jail inmates, by selected characteristics, 2000-2009 Table 7. Number of jail deaths, by state and year, 2000-2009 Table 8. Mortality rate per 100,000 local jail inmates, by state, 2000-2009 Table 9. Number of jail jurisdictions reporting to the Deaths in Custody Reporting Program, by state and year, 2000-2009 Table 10. Number of local jail inmate deaths, by cause of death and selected characteristics, 2000-2009 Table 11. Percent of local jail inmate deaths, by cause of death and selected characteristics, 2000-2009 Table 12. Average annual mortality rate per 100,000 local jail inmates, by cause of death and selected characteristics, 2000-2009 Table 13. Number of state prisoner deaths, by cause of death, 2001-2009 Table 14. Percent of state prisoner deaths, by cause of death, 2001-2009 Table 15. Mortality rate per 100,000 state prisoners, by cause of death, 2001-2009 Table 16. Number of state prisoner deaths, by selected characteristics, 2001-2009 Table 17. Percent of state prisoner deaths, by selected characteristics, 2001-2009 Table 18. Estimated number of state prisoners in custody at midyear, by selected characteristics, 2001-2009 Table 19. Mortality rate per 100,000 state prisoners, by selected characteristics, 2001-2009 Table 20. Number of state prisoner deaths, by state, 2001-2009 Table 21. Mortality rate per 100,000 state prisoners, by state, 2001-2009 Table 22. Number of state prisoner deaths, by cause of death and selected characteristics, 2001-2009 Table 23. Percent of state prisoner deaths, by cause of death and selected characteristics, 2001-2009 Table 24. Mortality rate per 100,000 state prisoners, by cause of death and selected characteristics, 2001-2009 Table 25. Number of state prisoner deaths, by cause of death and state, 2001-2009 Table 26. Mortality rate per 100,000 state prisoners, by cause of death and state, 2001-2009 4 Prison and Jail Deaths in Custody, 2000-2009 - Statistical Tables Table 1 Number of local jail inmate deaths, by cause of death, 2000–2009 Cause of death All causes Illness Heart disease AIDS-related Cancer Respiratory diseases Liver disease All other illnessesb Suicide Drug/alcohol intoxication Accident Homicide Other/unknown 2000 904 516 198 57 31 32 22 176 289 2001 944 488 216 59 25 19 26 143 314 2002 972 508 221 51 39 23 24 150 314 2003 1,004 514 241 54 35 22 29 133 296 2004 1,024 533 227 52 29 35 31 159 299 2005 1,049 504 203 40 37 22 31 171 286 2006 1,098 609 250 54 39 27 24 215 278 2007 1,102 609 232 43 42 49 39 204 285 37 25 17 20 58 35 19 30 55 35 18 42 89 28 15 62 77 32 24 59 84 24 22 129 87 32 36 56 79 18 20 91 2008a 960 446 177 31 25 35 33 145 230 43 15 17 209 2009 948 488 200 26 47 31 30 154 303 64 26 23 44 Note: Cause of death rankings may differ from previously published 2000–2007 estimates because cause of death was ranked on all deaths from 2000 to 2009, which resulted in small changes within some categories. aIn 2008, a high number of cases were missing cause of death information. These cases were classified as other/unknown. See Methodology for more information. bIncludes other specified (such as cerebrovascular disease, influenza, cirrhosis, and other non-leading natural causes of death) as well as unspecified illnesses. See Methodology for details on illness classifications. Source: Bureau of Justice Statistics, Deaths in Custody Reporting Program (DCRP). Table 2 Percent of local jail inmate deaths, by cause of death, 2000–2009 Cause of death All causes Illness Heart disease AIDS-related Cancer Respiratory diseases Liver disease All other illnessesb Suicide Drug/alcohol intoxication Accident Homicide Other/unknown 2000 100% 57.1% 21.9 6.3 3.4 3.5 2.4 19.5 32.0% 2001 100% 51.7% 22.9 6.3 2.6 2.0 2.8 15.1 33.3% 2002 100% 52.3% 22.7 5.2 4.0 2.4 2.5 15.5 32.3% 2003 100% 51.2% 24.0 5.4 3.5 2.2 2.9 13.3 29.5% 2004 100% 52.1% 22.2 5.1 2.8 3.4 3.0 15.6 29.2% 2005 100% 48.0% 19.4 3.8 3.5 2.1 3.0 16.3 27.3% 2006 100% 55.5% 22.8 4.9 3.6 2.5 2.2 19.5 25.3% 2007 100% 55.3% 21.1 3.9 3.8 4.4 3.5 18.6 25.9% 2008a 100% 46.5% 18.4 3.2 2.6 3.6 3.4 15.1 24.0% 2009 100% 51.5% 21.1 2.7 5.0 3.3 3.2 16.2 32.0% 4.1% 2.8% 1.9% 2.2% 6.1% 3.7% 2.0% 3.2% 5.7% 3.6% 1.9% 4.3% 8.9% 2.8% 1.5% 6.2% 7.5% 3.1% 2.3% 5.8% 8.0% 2.3% 2.1% 12.3% 7.9% 2.9% 3.3% 5.1% 7.5% 1.6% 1.8% 8.3% 4.5% 1.6% 1.8% 21.8% 6.8% 2.7% 2.4% 4.6% Note: Cause of death rankings may differ from previously published 2000-2007 estimates because cause of death was ranked on all deaths from 2000 to 2009, which resulted in small changes within some categories. aIn 2008, a high number of cases were missing cause of death information. These cases were classified as other/unknown. See Methodology for more information. bIncludes other specified (such as cerebrovascular disease, influenza, cirrhosis, and other non-leading natural causes of death) as well as unspecified illnesses. See Methodology for details on illness classifications. Source: Bureau of Justice Statistics, Deaths in Custody Reporting Program (DCRP). December 2011 5 Table 3 Mortality rate per 100,000 local jail inmates, by cause of death, 2000–2009 Cause of death All causes Illness Heart disease AIDS-related Cancer Respiratory diseases Liver disease All other illnessesb Suicide Drug/alcohol intoxication Accident Homicide Other/unknown 2000 151 86 33 10 5 5 4 29 48 6 4 3 3 2001 148 76 34 9 4 3 4 22 49 9 5 3 5 2002 145 76 33 8 6 3 4 22 47 8 5 3 6 2003 146 75 35 8 5 3 4 19 43 13 4 2 9 2004 143 74 32 7 4 5 4 22 42 11 4 3 8 2005 141 68 27 5 5 3 4 23 39 11 3 3 17 2006 142 79 32 7 5 3 3 28 36 11 4 5 7 2007 141 78 30 5 5 6 5 26 36 10 2 3 12 2008a 123 57 23 4 3 4 4 19 30 6 2 2 27 2009 127 66 27 3 6 4 4 21 41 9 3 3 6 Note: Cause of death rankings may differ from previously published 2000-2007 estimates because cause of death was ranked on all deaths from 2000 to 2009, which resulted in small changes within some categories. Mortality rates are based on the average daily population (ADP). In 2000 and 2001, ADP was estimated by taking the average of January 1st and December 31st one-day inmate population counts. aIn 2008, a high number of cases were missing cause of death information. These cases were classified as other/unknown. See Methodology for more information. bIncludes other specified (such as cerebrovascular disease, influenza, cirrhosis, and other non-leading natural causes of death) as well as unspecified illnesses. See Methodology for details on illness classifications. Source: Bureau of Justice Statistics, Deaths in Custody Reporting Program (DCRP). 6 Prison and Jail Deaths in Custody, 2000-2009 - Statistical Tables Table 4 Number of local jail inmate deaths, by selected characteristics, 2000–2009 Characteristic Total Sex Male Female Race/Hispanic originb White Black/African American Hispanic/Latino American Indian or Alaska Native Asian Hawaiian or other Pacific Islander Two or more races Age 17 or younger 18–24 25–34 35–44 45–54 55 or older Legal status Convictedc Unconvictedd Time served 7 or fewer days 8–30 31–60 61–120 121–180 180 or more 2008a 960 2009 948 972 130 841 119 838 110 531 409 127 549 399 125 513 311 107 535 271 108 14 6 17 9 12 12 11 13 21 8 0 0 1 1 1 0 1 2 0 2 0 0 5 103 212 284 266 128 7 105 211 300 264 134 5 108 193 285 276 171 6 103 196 313 306 169 4 101 199 293 323 182 6 84 168 247 276 178 3 86 173 236 257 193 245 719 256 740 227 788 231 802 238 850 247 851 200 755 246 690 362 163 104 120 74 135 398 177 93 121 72 126 399 181 112 112 75 128 385 193 109 129 70 128 387 202 125 149 80 126 392 185 137 146 82 154 347 163 109 122 66 130 364 164 100 114 52 146 2000 904 2001 944 2002 972 2003 1,004 2004 1,024 2005 1,049 2006 1,098 2007 1,102 813 91 849 91 865 107 869 133 895 129 930 119 969 129 453 305 118 515 284 116 536 305 113 538 324 119 502 360 135 561 333 118 9 5 13 6 5 4 10 6 13 10 1 2 1 0 1 0 0 0 8 89 184 265 239 115 8 107 193 282 240 111 7 101 186 337 237 102 258 628 254 683 329 169 108 116 56 119 348 176 105 125 63 113 Note: Detail may not sum to total due to missing data. aIn 2008, a high number of cases were missing cause of death information. These cases were classified as other/unknown. See Methodology for more information. bExcludes persons of Hispanic/Latino origin unless specified. cIncludes inmates who returned on a probation or parole violation. Forms were modified in 2009 to identify inmates who were convicted, or returned on a probation or parole violation. As with previous years, these cases are counted as convicted. See Methodology for more information on changes to the survey. dIncludes inmates whose status was marked as other or was unspecified. Sources: Bureau of Justice Statistics, Deaths in Custody Reporting Program (DCRP). December 2011 7 Table 5 Percent of local jail inmate deaths, by selected characteristics, 2000–2009 Characteristic Total Sex Male Female Race/Hispanic originb White Black/African American Hispanic/Latino American Indian or Alaska Native Asian Hawaiian or other Pacific Islander Two or more races Age 17 or younger 18–24 25–34 35–44 45–54 55 or older Legal status Convictedc Unconvictedd Time served 7 or fewer days 8–30 31–60 61–120 121–180 180 or more 2000 100% 2001 100% 2002 100% 2003 100% 2004 100% 2005 100% 2006 100% 2007 100% 2008a 100% 2009 100% 89.9% 10.1 90.3% 9.7 89.0% 11.0 86.7% 13.3 87.4% 12.6 88.7% 11.3 88.3% 11.7 88.2% 11.8 87.6% 12.4 88.4% 11.6 50.7% 34.2 13.2 55.1% 30.4 12.4 55.6% 31.6 11.7 54.0% 32.5 11.9 49.2% 35.3 13.2 54.3% 32.2 11.4 48.5% 37.4 11.6 49.9% 36.3 11.4 53.6% 32.5 11.2 56.7% 28.7 11.5 1.0 0.6 1.4 0.6 0.5 0.4 1.0 0.6 1.3 1.0 1.4 0.6 1.6 0.8 1.1 1.1 1.1 1.4 2.2 0.8 0.1 0.2 0.1 0.0 0.1 0.0 0.0 0.0 0.0 0.0 0.1 0.1 0.1 0.0 0.1 0.2 0.0 0.2 0.0 0.0 0.9% 9.9 20.4 29.4 26.6 12.8 0.9% 11.4 20.5 30.0 25.5 11.8 0.7% 10.4 19.2 34.7 24.4 10.5 0.5% 10.3 21.2 28.5 26.7 12.8 0.7% 10.3 20.7 29.4 25.9 13.1 0.5% 10.4 18.6 27.5 26.6 16.5 0.5% 9.4 17.9 28.6 28.0 15.5 0.4% 9.2 18.1 26.6 29.3 16.5 0.6% 8.8 17.5 25.8 28.8 18.6 0.3% 9.1 18.2 24.9 27.1 20.4 29.1% 70.9 27.1% 72.9 25.4% 74.6 25.7% 74.3 22.4% 77.6 22.4% 77.6 21.9% 78.1 22.5% 77.5 20.9% 79.1 26.3% 73.7 36.7% 18.8 12.0 12.9 6.2 13.3 37.4% 18.9 11.3 13.4 6.8 12.2 37.8% 17.0 10.9 12.5 7.7 14.1 40.3% 17.9 9.4 12.3 7.3 12.8 39.3% 18.0 11.1 11.1 7.4 12.7 38.0% 19.0 10.7 12.7 6.9 12.6 36.2% 18.9 11.7 13.9 7.5 11.8 35.8% 16.9 12.5 13.3 7.5 14.1 37.0% 17.4 11.6 13.0 7.0 13.9 38.7% 17.4 10.6 12.1 5.5 15.5 Note: Detail may not sum to total due to missing data. aIn 2008, a high number of cases were missing cause of death information. These cases were classified as other/unknown. See Methodology for more information. bExcludes persons of Hispanic/Latino origin unless specified. cIncludes inmates who returned on a probation or parole violation. Forms were modified in 2009 to identify inmates who were convicted, or returned on a probation or parole violation. As with previous years, these cases are counted as convicted. See Methodology for more information on changes to the survey. dIncludes inmates whose status was marked as other or was unspecified. Sources: Bureau of Justice Statistics, Deaths in Custody Reporting Program (DCRP). 8 Prison and Jail Deaths in Custody, 2000-2009 - Statistical Tables Table 6 Mortality rate per 100,000 local jail inmates, by selected characteristics, 2000–2009 Characteristic Total Sex Male Female Race/Hispanic originb White Black/African American Hispanic/Latino American Indian or Alaska Native Asian Hawaiian or other Pacific Islander Two or more races Age 17 or younger 18–24 25–34 35–44 45–54 55 or older Legal status Convictedc Unconvictedd 2000 151 2001 148 2002 145 2003 146 2004 143 2005 141 2006 142 2007 141 2008a 123 2009 127 153 133 150 123 146 138 143 162 143 147 144 126 144 129 143 129 124 120 128 121 211 128 107 225 111 98 224 114 92 218 118 94 196 126 102 213 123 87 194 145 90 198 140 87 188 111 67 205 101 71 112 88 152 99 56 63 108 92 136 147 141 85 164 123 114 161 105 176 210 113 0 0 88 ! 11 ! 82 ! 0 79 ! 0 0 0 0 0 71 ! 2! 68 ! 0 67 ! 5! 0 4! 122 ! 52 96 169 396 870 114 ! 59 94 168 372 785 95 ! 53 87 193 352 691 69 ! 53 96 160 362 785 96 ! 53 92 165 326 737 68 ! 53 82 153 312 853 82 ! 49 80 153 316 762 58 ! 48 81 157 300 729 86! 40 67 138 260 666 44 ! 42 71 143 256 708 98 187 96 182 92 180 94 178 80 183 82 174 81 177 83 175 41 261 53 250 Note: Detail may not sum to total due to missing data. Mortality rates are based on the average daily population (ADP). In 2000 and 2001, ADP was estimated by taking the average of January 1st and December 31 one-day inmate population counts. Inmate populations for sex and legal status are based on the Annual Survey of Jails (ASJ), from 2000 through 2009. Inmate populations for age and race/Hispanic origin are based on the Survey of Inmates in Local Jails (SILJ) from 2000 through 2002, and on the National Inmate Survey (NIS) and the Annual Survey of Jails (ASJ), from 2003 through 2009. See the Methodology for these tables for more information on estimates of age. ! Interpret with caution; too few cases to provide a reliable rate. See Methodology for more information. aIn 2008, a high number of cases were missing cause of death information. These cases were classified as other/unknown. See Methodology for more information. bExcludes persons of Hispanic/Latino origin unless specified. cIncludes inmates who returned on a probation or parole violation. Forms were modified in 2009 to identify inmates who were convicted, or returned on a probation or parole violation. As with previous years, these cases are counted as convicted. See Methodology for more information on changes to the survey. dIncludes inmates whose status was marked as other or was unspecified. Sources: Bureau of Justice Statistics, Deaths in Custody Reporting Program (DCRP), Annual Survey of Jails (ASJ), National Inmate Survey (NIS), and Survey of Inmates in Local Jails (SILJ). December 2011 9 Table 7 Number of jail deaths, by state and year, 2000–2009 State All states Alabama Alaska Arizona Arkansas California Colorado Connecticut Delaware District of Columbia Florida Georgia Hawaii Idaho Illinois Indiana Iowa Kansas Kentucky Louisiana Maine Maryland Massachusetts Michigan Minnesota Mississippi Missouri Montana Nebraska Nevada New Hampshire New Jersey New Mexico New York North Carolina North Dakota Ohio Oklahoma Oregon Pennsylvania Rhode Island South Carolina South Dakota Tennessee Texas Utah Vermont Virginia Washington West Virginia Wisconsin Wyoming 2000 904 24 … 15 9 109 13 … … 4 82 38 … 3 31 21 2 9 16 10 2 22 5 23 6 9 16 3 5 15 3 31 15 57 15 1 23 15 10 38 … 17 4 29 97 6 … 34 8 2 7 0 2001 944 27 … 18 13 124 16 … … 0 100 39 … 3 21 21 4 9 13 22 2 20 10 17 8 12 14 1 5 18 2 17 9 52 17 1 20 18 10 50 … 23 2 28 84 6 … 41 10 6 11 0 2002 972 22 … 24 14 131 14 … … 10 79 50 … 1 22 14 3 12 12 22 7 20 16 18 6 17 8 5 6 6 5 17 9 51 32 2 30 9 7 51 … 17 1 29 97 13 … 36 11 2 12 2 2003 1,004 15 … 16 22 126 13 … … 12 85 45 … 2 30 23 1 10 14 32 3 25 9 26 9 18 17 5 2 6 3 38 7 47 22 2 30 13 7 53 … 11 0 23 96 7 … 42 17 6 11 3 2004 1,024 23 … 12 13 120 11 … … 13 86 54 … 1 41 18 4 15 16 41 2 15 8 20 9 17 6 3 4 8 3 34 17 43 21 1 19 14 15 66 … 16 1 39 99 11 … 34 11 6 10 4 2005 1,049 23 … 27 7 156 18 … … 11 79 42 … 7 25 16 4 11 22 31 1 23 21 29 8 16 10 6 2 14 1 32 11 51 18 0 24 18 8 57 … 19 3 36 91 10 … 30 11 6 11 3 2006 1,098 35 … 19 11 127 13 … … 12 99 47 … 5 37 27 3 10 21 26 5 27 14 21 11 18 13 1 6 9 4 36 21 52 21 2 26 21 11 56 … 21 1 30 98 7 … 36 19 6 11 2 2007 1,102 22 … 21 10 129 21 … … 10 103 44 … 7 31 18 5 7 25 31 1 32 14 18 8 18 25 2 2 10 4 34 15 52 28 1 26 24 4 55 … 14 1 35 90 11 … 59 15 4 15 1 2008 960 19 … 12 15 107 21 … … 7 77 55 … 1 28 11 2 12 22 34 1 25 17 12 4 14 18 2 5 8 2 27 11 32 19 1 23 17 15 44 … 19 2 37 86 6 … 50 16 6 17 1 2009 948 20 … 11 5 132 14 … … 8 87 45 … 6 29 16 6 11 17 22 2 20 17 20 3 13 20 6 7 14 5 25 11 35 21 2 27 17 7 36 … 15 2 34 76 12 … 38 14 7 11 2 Note: Jails are locally run jurisdictions under the authority of a sheriff, county government, or other local authority. Jail jurisdictions include counties (parishes in Louisiana) or municipal governments that administer one or more local jails. See Methodology for more information on the function of jails. … Not available. Prisons and jails form one integrated system. See the prison tables for mortality data. Source: Bureau of Justice Statistics, Deaths in Custody Reporting Program (DCRP). 10 Prison and Jail Deaths in Custody, 2000-2009 - Statistical Tables Table 8 Mortality rate per 100,000 local jail inmates, by state, 2000–2009 State All states Alabama Alaska Arizona Arkansas California Colorado Connecticut Delaware District of Columbia Florida Georgia Hawaii Idaho Illinois Indiana Iowa Kansas Kentucky Louisiana Maine Maryland Massachusetts Michigan Minnesota Mississippi Missouri Montana Nebraska Nevada New Hampshire New Jersey New Mexico New York North Carolina North Dakota Ohio Oklahoma Oregon Pennsylvania Rhode Island South Carolina South Dakota Tennessee Texas Utah Vermont Virginia Washington West Virginia Wisconsin Wyoming 2000 151 185 ... 138 171! 150 142 ... ... 242! 166 113 ... 112! 178 165 66! 177! 139 44! 154! 210 53! 145 121! 91! 211 232! 234! 288 338! 205 253 208 122 162! 143 208 150! 135 ... 194 344! 143 167 112! ... 170 93! 71! 54! 0 2001 148 228 ... 132 233 171 154 ... ... 0 200 110 ... 101! 107 124 129! 159! 68 82 142! 182 91! 103 141! 129 171 53! 211! 333 145! 108 140! 181 132 154! 118 249 132! 165 ... 218 176! 138 154 107! ... 185 81! 185! 86! 0 2002 145 164 ... 189 229 173 126 ... ... 316! 145 132 ... 30! 106 95 83! 195 86 81 464! 166 136 108 101! 167 89! 277! 241! 106! 323! 104 136! 166 212 268! 161 119! 110! 153 ... 140 77! 138 173 223 ... 152 91! 65! 89! 163! 2003 146 119 ... 116 352 165 111 ... ... 529 159 114 ... 59! 140 149 26! 134! 97 115 191! 199 73! 156 140! 166 181 260! 80! 80! 192! 225 95! 154 144 242! 153 158 106! 164 ... 100! 0 100 159 112! ... 168 144 182! 78! 224! 2004 143 171 ... 82 211 154 95! ... ... 374 143 128 ... 34! 201 109 110! 219 98 143 135! 116 61! 111 128! 162 60! 149! 140! 116! 181! 196 210 141 128 114! 96 154 230 200 ... 138 66! 168 157 169! ... 133 93! 166! 69! 267! 2005 141 157 ... 176 116! 190 136 ... ... 475! 125 94 ... 178! 84 92 96! 148! 134 104 64! 181 168 159 110! 146 97! 288! 68! 228 54! 177 128! 166 100 0 122 179 117! 166 ... 157 192! 149 169 156! ... 113 85! 147! 74! 196! 2006 142 235 ... 126 172! 155 94 ... ... 346 153 103 ... 127! 181 144 75! 130! 124 100 283! 207 101 112 151! 164 116 50! 219! 139! 195! 189 233 161 115 208! 126 191 165! 155 ... 165 61! 92 144 107! ... 127 142 139! 73! 131! 2007 141 139 ... 127 143! 155 155 ... ... 318! 154 98 ... 172! 150 104 120! 95! 138 104 61! 228 103 98 106! 152 235 116! 68! 131! 196! 185 171 166 147 113! 127 222 48! 144 ... 103 65! 139 130 160! ... 200 109 92! 96 64! 2008 123 118 ... 67 203 128 160 ... ... 234! 115 115 ... 25! 134 62 49! 156 122 117 63! 184 128 68 56! 127 154 112! 159! 106! 99! 151 121! 106 98 104! 119 169 238 118 ... 139 141! 139 124 87! ... 173 119 138! 110 59! 2009 127 145 ... 73! 67! 166 106 ... ... 259! 141 97 ... 160! 148 87 154! 157! 95 77 127! 164 129 118 45! 134 173 344! 204! 181 237! 152 133! 124 128 223! 135 162 117! 95 ... 119 123! 129 113 173 ... 134 107 171! 90! 123! Note: Jails are locally run jurisdictions under the authority of a sheriff, county government, or other local authority. Jail jurisdictions include counties (parishes in Louisiana) or municipal governments that administer one or more local jails. See Methodology for more information on the function of jails. Mortality rates are based on the average daily population (ADP). In 2000 and 2001, ADP was estimated by taking the average of January 1st and December 31 one-day inmate population counts. Mortality rates between states are not directly comparable because rates are not adjusted for age, sex, race, geographic location, or any other characteristic. … Not available. Prisons and jails form one integrated system. See the prison tables for mortality data. ! Interpret with caution; estimate based on too few cases to provide a reliable rate. See Methodology for more information. Source: Bureau of Justice Statistics, Deaths in Custody Reporting Program (DCRP). December 2011 11 Table 9 Number of jail jurisidictions reporting to the Deaths in Custody Reporting Program, by state and year, 2000–2009 State All states Alabama Alaska Arizona Arkansas California Colorado Connecticut Delaware District of Columbia Florida Georgia Hawaii Idaho Illinois Indiana Iowa Kansas Kentucky Louisiana Maine Maryland Massachusetts Michigan Minnesota Mississippi Missouri Montana Nebraska Nevada New Hampshire New Jersey New Mexico New York North Carolina North Dakota Ohio Oklahoma Oregon Pennsylvania Rhode Island South Carolina South Dakota Tennessee Texas Utah Vermont Virginia Washington West Virginiaa Wisconsin Wyoming 2000 2,979 152 … 16 85 74 57 … … 1 69 200 … 39 91 92 94 96 80 90 15 25 13 83 76 92 125 41 64 20 10 21 34 60 96 23 103 100 34 67 … 51 28 103 253 26 … 76 60 29 71 22 2001 2,964 150 … 15 84 71 57 … … 1 69 196 … 38 90 93 93 96 78 89 15 25 15 83 76 91 125 41 63 20 10 21 35 60 96 23 101 100 34 67 … 50 29 103 252 26 … 75 60 28 71 22 2002 2,944 148 … 15 84 71 57 … … 1 69 196 … 38 91 92 93 96 80 89 15 25 15 82 76 92 125 40 63 20 10 21 35 60 96 23 99 100 34 67 … 51 29 102 249 26 … 75 59 19 71 22 2003 2,929 147 … 15 83 71 57 … … 1 69 194 … 38 91 92 93 96 79 90 15 25 15 82 76 90 124 40 63 20 10 21 34 60 96 23 96 99 34 66 … 50 29 102 249 26 … 75 58 18 71 22 2004 2,913 146 … 15 82 71 57 … … 1 68 194 … 38 90 92 93 96 79 89 15 25 15 82 76 89 120 41 63 20 10 21 34 60 95 23 96 98 34 66 … 50 29 102 246 26 … 75 58 16 71 22 2005 2,886 143 … 15 83 70 57 … … 1 68 189 … 38 91 91 93 96 76 87 15 25 16 82 77 86 120 40 63 20 10 21 32 60 95 23 96 96 33 66 … 50 28 102 246 26 … 73 57 13 71 22 2006 2,856 137 … 15 81 69 55 … … 1 68 186 … 38 90 91 93 95 74 88 15 25 16 81 76 84 122 40 62 20 10 21 32 60 95 22 94 94 33 66 … 50 28 101 246 26 … 69 57 12 71 22 2007 2,835 133 … 15 81 68 55 … … 1 68 184 … 37 90 91 93 95 74 87 14 25 16 81 76 85 121 40 62 20 10 21 32 59 95 21 93 93 33 66 … 50 28 100 241 26 … 67 57 12 71 22 2008 2,820 126 … 15 81 67 55 … … 1 68 181 … 37 90 91 93 94 74 87 14 25 16 81 75 84 121 40 62 20 10 21 32 59 94 21 93 93 33 66 … 50 28 100 240 26 … 67 57 12 71 22 2009 2,743 116 … 15 77 65 55 … … 1 66 174 … 36 90 90 92 91 70 81 14 24 16 81 73 80 114 38 61 20 10 20 29 57 89 22 93 88 33 64 … 49 26 95 236 26 … 67 57 12 69 22 Note: Reporting jails include all jails that reported population or death data to the Deaths in Custody Reporting Program (DCRP). All jails are asked to report population data regardless of whether an inmate death occurred. Jails are locally run jurisdictions under the authority of a sheriff, county government, or other local authority. Jail jurisdictions include counties (parishes in Louisiana) or municipal governments that administer one or more local jails. See Methodology for more information on the function of jails. … Not available. Prisons and jails form one integrated system. See the prison tables for mortality data. aIn 2007, the Bureau of Justice Statistics began receiving data from a centralized regional jail respondent that covered all West Virginia jails. Source: Bureau of Justice Statistics, Deaths in Custody Reporting Program (DCRP). 12 Prison and Jail Deaths in Custody, 2000-2009 - Statistical Tables Table 10 Number of local jail inmate deaths, by cause of death and selected characteristics, 2000–2009 Characteristic Total Sex Male Female Race/Hispanic originc White Black/African American Hispanic/Latino American Indian or Alaska Native Asian Hawaiian or other Pacific Islander Two or more races Age 17 or younger 18–24 25–34 35–44 45–54 55 or older Legal status Convictedd Unconvictede Time served 7 or fewer days 8–30 31–60 61–120 121–180 180 or more Illness Heart AIDSRespiratory Liver All other Drug/alcohol Other/ disease related Cancer diseases disease illnessesa Suicide intoxication Accident Homicide unknownb 2,165 467 349 295 289 1,650 2,894 673 270 211 742 1,948 217 407 60 314 35 240 55 271 18 1,368 281 2,661 232 543 130 244 26 207 4 638 100 1,002 920 193 77 330 57 147 159 35 130 126 32 159 62 61 677 707 227 2,022 421 337 407 159 90 171 65 26 77 94 37 364 258 91 21 10 1 2 2 5 5 0 5 0 13 14 59 38 11 1 3 4 0 1 5 4 4 2 0 0 0 0 0 0 0 0 0 0 1 4 1 0 0 0 0 0 0 1 2 56 210 561 763 569 3 9 84 193 146 31 0 6 24 55 125 139 2 8 38 78 95 74 0 3 13 66 150 57 3 86 219 472 558 310 39 576 867 873 414 118 4 89 210 207 135 26 1 34 67 79 65 24 1 47 51 53 40 18 4 73 132 205 193 117 655 1,492 126 336 99 248 76 214 77 212 439 1,199 508 2,370 115 554 79 190 52 153 176 538 695 435 275 287 151 281 35 91 63 104 73 98 14 44 45 65 49 126 60 85 33 45 24 42 67 51 46 46 27 51 501 346 211 218 133 214 1,376 456 300 303 146 282 476 45 20 42 19 55 136 37 17 25 13 38 57 48 23 32 15 33 294 135 69 87 40 85 Note: Detail may not sum to total due to missing data. Cause of death rankings may differ from previously published 2000-2007 estimates because cause of death was ranked on all deaths from 2000 to 2009, which resulted in small changes within some categories. aIncludes other specified (such as cerebrovascular disease, influenza, cirrhosis, and other non-leading natural causes of death) as well as unspecified illnesses. See Methodology for details on illness classifications. bIn 2008, a high number of cases were missing cause of death information. These cases were classified as other/unknown. cExcludes persons of Hispanic/Latino origin unless specified. dIncludes inmates who returned on a probation or parole violation. Forms were modified in 2009 to identify inmates who were convicted, or returned on a probation or parole violation. As with previous years, these cases are counted as convicted. See Methodology for more information on changes to the survey. eIncludes inmates whose status was marked as other or was unspecified. Sources: Bureau of Justice Statistics, Deaths in Custody Reporting Program (DCRP). December 2011 13 Table 11 Percent of local jail inmate deaths, by cause of death and selected characteristics, 2000–2009 Characteristic Total Sex Male Female Race/Hispanic originb White Black/African American Hispanic/Latino American Indian or Alaska Native Asian Hawaiian or other Pacific Islander Two or more races Age 17 or younger 18–24 25–34 35–44 45–54 55 or older Legal status Convictedc Unconvictedd Time served 7 or fewer days 8–30 31–60 61–120 121–180 180 or more Heart AIDSdisease related 100% 100% Illness Respiratory Liver Cancer diseases disease 100% 100% 100% All other illnessesa 100% Suicide 100% Drug/alcohol intoxication Accident 100% 100% Homicide 100% 90.0% 10.0 87.2% 12.8 90.0% 10.0 81.4% 18.6 93.8% 6.2 82.9% 17.0 91.9% 8.0 80.7% 19.3 90.4% 9.6 98.1% 1.9 46.3% 16.5% 42.1% 44.1% 55.0% 41.0% 69.9% 60.5% 63.3% 36.5% 42.5 8.9 70.7 12.2 45.6 10.0 42.7 10.8 21.5 21.1 42.8 13.8 14.5 11.6 23.6 13.4 24.1 9.6 44.5 17.5 1.0 0.5 0.2 0.4 0.6 1.4 1.7 0.0 1.7 0.0 0.8 0.8 2.0 1.3 1.6 0.1 1.1 1.5 0.0 0.5 0.2 0.1 0.0 0.0 0.0 0.0 0.0 0.0 0.0 0.0 0.0 0.0 0.0 0.1 0.1 0.0 0.0 0.0 0.0 0.0 0.1% 2.6 9.7 25.9 35.2 26.3 0.6% 1.9 18.0 41.3 31.3 6.6 0.0% 1.7 6.9 15.8 35.8 39.8 0.7% 2.7 12.9 26.4 32.2 25.1 0.0% 1.0 4.5 22.8 51.9 19.7 0.2% 5.2 13.3 28.6 33.8 18.8 1.3% 19.9 30.0 30.2 14.3 4.1 0.6% 13.2 31.2 30.8 20.1 3.9 0.4% 12.6 24.8 29.3 24.1 8.9 0.5% 22.3 24.2 25.1 19.0 8.5 30.3% 68.9 27.0% 71.9 28.4% 71.1 25.8% 72.5 26.6% 73.4 26.6% 72.7 17.6% 81.9 17.1% 82.3 29.3% 70.4 24.6% 72.5 32.1% 20.1 12.7 13.3 7.0 13.0 7.5% 19.5 13.5 22.3 15.6 21.0 4.0% 12.6 12.9 18.6 14.0 36.1 20.3% 28.8 11.2 15.3 8.1 14.2 23.2% 17.6 15.9 15.9 9.3 17.6 30.4% 21.0 12.8 13.2 8.1 13.0 47.5% 15.8 10.4 10.5 5.0 9.7 70.7% 6.7 3.0 6.2 2.8 8.2 50.4% 13.7 6.3 9.3 4.8 14.1 27.0% 22.7 10.9 15.2 7.1 15.6 Note: Detail may not sum to total due to missing data. Cause of death rankings may differ from previously published 2000-2007 estimates because cause of death was ranked on all deaths from 2000 to 2009, which resulted in small changes within some categories. aIncludes other specified (such as cerebrovascular disease, influenza, cirrhosis, and other non-leading natural causes of death) as well as unspecified illnesses. See Methodology for details on illness. bExcludes persons of Hispanic/Latino origin unless specified. cIncludes inmates who returned on a probation or parole violation. Forms were modified in 2009 to identify inmates who were convicted, or returned on a probation or parole violation. As with previous years, these cases are counted as convicted. See Methodology for more information on changes to the survey. dIncludes inmates whose status was marked as other or was unspecified. Sources: Bureau of Justice Statistics, Deaths in Custody Reporting Program (DCRP). 14 Prison and Jail Deaths in Custody, 2000-2009 - Statistical Tables Table 12 Average annual mortality rate per 100,000 local jail inmates, by cause of death and selected characteristics, 2000–2009 Characteristic Total Sex Male Female Race/Hispanic originb White Black/African American Hispanic/Latino American Indian or Alaska Native Asian Hawaiian or other Pacific Islander Two or more races Age 17 or younger 18–24 25–34 35–44 45–54 55 or older Legal status Convictedc Unconvictedd Illness Respiratory Cancer diseases 5 4 Heart disease 30 AIDSrelated 7 Liver All other disease illnessesa 4 23 31 25 7 7 5 4 4 6 4 2 22 32 43 27 40 3 6 5 6 27 34 14 12 4 6 3 5 2 2 5 22 15! 1! 3! 2 7 5 0 30! 1! 0 0 0 0 3! 3 9 32 90 288 4! --! 4 11 17 16 21 38 4 9 Suicide 41 Drug/alcohol intoxication 9 Accident 4 Homicide 3 9 15 4 3 3 --! 80 16 7 3 26 17 16 25 6 7 2 2 3 3 5 0 14 21 62 56 12! 1! 3 6 0 1! 0 0 0 0 0 0 7! 1! 7! 0 0 0 0 0 0 --! 1 3 15 70 3! --! 2 4 11 37 0 --! 1 4 18 29 4! 4 10 27 66 157 55 29 38 49 49 60 6! 5 9 12 16 13 1! 2 3 4 8 12 1! 2 2 3 5 9 3 6 2 5 2 5 14 30 16 60 4 14 2 5 2 4 Note: Detail may not sum to total due to missing data. Cause of death rankings may differ from previously published 2000-2007 estimates because cause of death was ranked on all deaths from 2000 to 2009, which resulted in small changes within some categories. Mortality rates are based on the average daily population (ADP). In 2000 and 2001, ADP was estimated by taking the average of January 1st and December 31st one-day inmate population counts. Inmate populations for sex and legal status are based on the Annual Survey of Jails (ASJ), from 2000 through 2009. Inmate populations for age and race/Hispanic origin are based on the Survey of Inmates in Local Jails (SILJ) from 2000 through 2002, and on the National Inmate Survey (NIS) and the Annual Survey of Jails (ASJ), from 2003 through 2009. See Methodology for more information on age estimates. -- Less than 0.5. ! Interpret with caution; too few cases to provide a reliable rate. See Methodology for more information. aIncludes other specified (such as cerebrovascular disease, influenza, cirrhosis, and other non-leading natural causes of death) as well as unspecified illnesses. See Methodology for details on illness classifications. bExcludes persons of Hispanic/Latino origin unless specified. cIncludes inmates who returned on a probation or parole violation. Forms were modified in 2009 to identify inmates who were convicted, or returned on a probation or parole violation. As with previous years, these cases are counted as convicted. See Methodology for more information on changes to the survey. dIncludes inmates whose status was marked as other or was unspecified. Sources: Bureau of Justice Statistics, Deaths in Custody Reporting Program (DCRP), Annual Survey of Jails (ASJ), National Inmate Survey (NIS), and Survey of Inmates in Local Jails (SILJ). December 2011 15 Table 13 Number of state prisoner deaths, by cause of death, 2001–2009 Cause of death All causes Illness Heart disease Cancer Liver disease AIDS-related All other illnessesb Suicide Homicide Drug/alcohol intoxication Accident Other/unknown 2001 2,877 2,573 749 628 225 272 699 169 39 35 23 38 2002 2,942 2,621 804 650 201 242 724 168 48 37 31 37 2003 3,165 2,843 821 776 248 210 788 199 49 23 26 25 2004 3,129 2,787 838 710 219 146 874 200 49 22 34 37 2005 3,172 2,819 851 763 237 154 814 213 56 37 30 17 2006 3,239 2,833 866 765 244 132 826 220 55 57 33 41 2007a 3,392 2,981 710 600 190 120 1,361 216 57 41 29 68 2008 3,452 3,030 859 858 234 98 981 197 40 58 26 101 2009 3,408 3,014 870 911 258 94 881 201 55 50 31 57 Note: Data may have been revised from previously published statistics to reflect updated information. Executions are not included; for data on executions, see Capital Punishment, 2009 - Statistical Tables. aIn 2007, a high number of cases were missing cause of death information. These cases were classified as all other illnesses. bIncludes other specified (such as cerebrovascular disease, influenza, cirrhosis, and other non-leading natural causes of death) as well as unspecified illnesses. See Methodology for details on illness classifications. Source: Bureau of Justice Statistics, Deaths in Custody Reporting Program (DCRP). Table 14 Percent of state prisoner deaths, by cause of death, 2001–2009 Cause of death All causes Illness Heart disease Cancer Liver disease AIDS-related All other illnessesb Suicide Homicide Drug/alcohol intoxication Accident Other/unknown 2001 100% 89.4% 26.0 21.8 7.8 9.5 24.3 5.9% 1.4 1.2 0.8 1.3 2002 100% 89.1% 27.3 22.1 6.8 8.2 24.6 5.7% 1.6 1.3 1.1 1.3 2003 100% 89.8% 25.9 24.5 7.8 6.6 24.9 6.3% 1.5 0.7 0.8 0.8 2004 100% 89.1% 26.8 22.7 7.0 4.7 27.9 6.4% 1.6 0.7 1.1 1.2 2005 100% 88.9% 26.8 24.1 7.5 4.9 25.7 6.7% 1.8 1.2 0.9 0.5 2006 100% 87.5% 26.7 23.6 7.5 4.1 25.5 6.8% 1.7 1.8 1.0 1.3 2007a 100% 87.9% 20.9 17.7 5.6 3.5 40.1 6.4% 1.7 1.2 0.9 2.0 2008 100% 87.8% 24.9 24.9 6.8 2.8 28.4 5.7% 1.2 1.7 0.8 2.9 2009 100% 88.4% 25.5 26.7 7.6 2.8 25.9 5.9% 1.6 1.5 0.9 1.7 Note: Data may have been revised from previously published statistics to reflect updated information. Executions are not included; for data on executions, see Capital Punishment, 2009 - Statistical Tables. aIn 2007, a high number of cases were missing cause of death information. These cases were classified as all other illnesses. bIncludes other specified (such as cerebrovascular disease, influenza, cirrhosis, and other non-leading natural causes of death) as well as unspecified illnesses. See Methodology for details on illness classifications. Source: Bureau of Justice Statistics, Deaths in Custody Reporting Program (DCRP). 16 Prison and Jail Deaths in Custody, 2000-2009 - Statistical Tables Table 15 Mortality rate per 100,000 state prisoners, by cause of death, 2001–2009 Cause of death All causes Illness Heart disease Cancer Liver disease AIDS-related All other illnessesb Suicide Homicide Drug/alcohol intoxication Accident Other/unknown 2001 242 217 63 53 19 23 59 14 3 3 2 3 2002 245 218 67 54 17 20 60 14 4 3 3 3 2003 258 232 67 63 20 17 64 16 4 2 2 2 2004 252 225 68 57 18 12 71 16 4 2 3 3 2005 253 225 68 61 19 12 65 17 4 3 2 1 2007a 257 226 54 46 14 9 103 16 4 3 2 5 2006 250 218 67 59 19 10 64 17 4 4 3 3 2008 260 228 65 65 18 7 74 15 3 4 2 8 2009 257 227 66 69 19 7 66 15 4 4 2 4 Note: Data are from the Prisoners at Midyear series. Data may have been revised from previously published statistics to reflect updated information. State prison mortality rates are per 100,000 inmates held in state custody (including private facilities) on June 30th of each year. The mortality rates presented are not adjusted for age, sex, race, geographic location, or any other characteristic. Executions are not included; for data on executions, see Capital Punishment, 2009 - Statistical Tables. aIn 2007, a high number of cases were missing cause of death information. These cases were classified as all other illnesses. bIncludes other specified (such as cerebrovascular disease, influenza, cirrhosis, and other non-leading natural causes of death) as well as unspecified illnesses. See Methodology for details on illness classifications. Source: Bureau of Justice Statistics, Deaths in Custody Reporting Program (DCRP), National Prisoner Statistics (NPS). Table 16 Number of state prisoner deaths, by selected characteristics, 2001–2009 Characteristic Total Sex Male Female Race/Hispanic origina White Black/African American Hispanic/Latino American Indian or Alaska Native Asian Hawaiian or other Pacific Islander Otherb Age 17 or younger 18–24 25–34 35–44 45–54 55 or older 2001 2,877 2002 2,942 2003 3,165 2004 3,129 2005 3,172 2006 3,239 2007 3,392 2008 3,452 2009 3,408 2,777 100 2,823 119 3,037 126 2,993 136 3,029 143 3,109 130 3,255 137 3,289 163 3,258 150 1,343 1,164 324 1,404 1,156 332 1,596 1,204 311 1,549 1,182 332 1,625 1,164 324 1,630 1,151 404 1,719 1,226 384 1,823 1,157 399 1,768 1,196 372 25 4 20 12 24 8 29 15 32 12 25 8 34 11 36 18 31 20 7 5 7 5 7 6 5 16 6 4 2 15 7 2 4 15 4 3 2 86 258 657 897 972 1 63 249 663 909 1,055 3 57 277 669 983 1,171 1 82 256 620 964 1,204 1 78 245 601 1,009 1,237 1 60 251 562 1,062 1,302 1 69 226 515 1,031 1,550 3 67 222 469 1,063 1,628 0 69 210 468 1,036 1,624 Note: Detail may not sum to total due to missing data. Data may have been revised from previously published statistics to reflect updated information. Executions are not included; for data on executions, see Capital Punishment, 2009 - Statistical Tables. aExcludes persons of Hispanic/Latino origin unless specified. bIncludes persons of two or more races or unknown race. Source: Bureau of Justice Statistics, Deaths in Custody Reporting Program (DCRP). December 2011 17 Table 17 Percent of state prisoner deaths, by selected characteristics, 2001–2009 Characteristic Total Sex Male Female Race/Hispanic origina White Black/African American Hispanic/Latino American Indian or Alaska Native Asian Hawaiian or other Pacific Islander Otherb Age 17 or younger 18–24 25–34 35–44 45–54 55 or older 2001 100% 2002 100% 2003 100% 2004 100% 2005 100% 2006 100% 2007 100% 2008 100% 2009 100% 96.5% 3.5 96.0% 4.0 96.0% 4.0 95.7% 4.3 95.5% 4.5 96.0% 4.0 96.0% 4.0 95.3% 4.7 95.6% 4.4 46.7% 40.5 11.3 47.7% 39.3 11.3 50.5% 38.0 9.8 49.5% 37.8 10.6 51.2% 36.7 10.2 50.3% 35.5 12.5 50.7% 36.1 11.3 52.8% 33.5 11.6 51.9% 35.1 10.9 0.9 0.1 0.7 0.4 0.8 0.2 0.9 0.5 1.0 0.4 0.8 0.3 1.0 0.3 1.0 0.5 0.9 0.6 0.2 0.2 0.2 0.2 0.2 0.2 0.2 0.5 0.2 0.1 0.1 0.5 0.2 0.1 0.1 0.4 0.1 0.1 0.1% 3.0 9.0 22.8 31.2 33.8 0.0% 2.1 8.5 22.5 30.9 35.9 0.1% 1.8 8.8 21.1 31.1 37.0 0.0% 2.6 8.2 19.8 30.8 38.5 0.0% 2.5 7.7 18.9 31.8 39.0 0.0% 1.9 7.7 17.4 32.8 40.2 0.0% 2.0 6.7 15.2 30.4 45.7 0.1% 1.9 6.4 13.6 30.8 47.2 0.0% 2.0 6.2 13.7 30.4 47.7 Note: Detail may not sum to total due to missing data. Data may have been revised from previously published statistics to reflect updated information. Executions are not included; for data on executions, see Capital Punishment, 2009 - Statistical Tables. aExcludes persons of Hispanic/Latino origin unless specified. bIncludes persons of two or more races or unknown race. Source: Bureau of Justice Statistics, Deaths in Custody Reporting Program (DCRP). 18 Prison and Jail Deaths in Custody, 2000-2009 - Statistical Tables Table 18 Estimated number of state prisoners in custody at midyear, by selected characteristics, 2001–2009 Characteristic Total Sex Male Female Race/Hispanic origina White Black/African American Hispanic/Latino American Indian or Alaska Native Asian Hawaiian or other Pacific Islander Otherb Age 17 or younger 18–24 25–34 35–44 45–54 55 or older 2001 1,187,800 2002 1,200,000 2003 1,225,700 2004 1,239,700 2005 1,252,500 2006 1,297,300 2007 1,321,800 2008 1,327,100 2009 1,326,600 1,110,400 77,500 1,121,300 78,700 1,143,100 82,600 1,155,500 84,200 1,165,400 87,200 1,205,100 92,200 1,227,300 94,500 1,232,200 95,000 1,232,600 94,100 425,100 433,800 458,900 453,500 462,800 475,100 479,800 485,800 483,000 531,000 160,600 524,500 165,900 523,500 170,000 519,000 180,100 517,500 183,300 523,300 190,000 531,200 196,100 536,900 187,000 532,700 191,200 11,500 5,100 12,200 5,400 12,600 5,600 13,000 5,700 13,300 5,900 14,300 6,000 14,000 6,000 14,400 5,500 14,700 6,000 2,100 8,800 2,100 9,500 2,200 9,900 2,200 10,200 2,100 10,400 2,200 11,400 2,200 12,600 2,400 12,400 2,500 13,200 2,900 217,900 403,300 362,900 153,200 47,900 3,000 216,900 401,000 362,900 163,800 52,600 2,500 215,800 408,200 364,100 176,500 57,700 2,500 218,200 412,900 368,200 178,600 58,300 2,600 220,500 418,400 372,000 180,400 58,900 2,800 227,600 429,600 384,500 185,600 60,400 2,700 232,200 440,600 391,800 190,000 62,000 2,500 189,200 434,000 391,500 232,200 77,900 2,500 189,100 433,900 391,400 232,100 77,800 Note: Detail may not sum to total due to missing data. The estimated number of state prisoners presented is rounded. Mortality rates based on this population (tables 19 and 24) are calculated on exact numbers. Data are from the Prisoners at Midyear series. Data may have been revised from previously published statistics to reflect updated information. Executions are not included; for data on executions, see Capital Punishment, 2009 - Statistical Tables. aExcludes persons of Hispanic/Latino origin unless specified. bIncludes persons of two or more races or unknown race. Source: Bureau of Justice Statistics, Deaths in Custody Reporting Program (DCRP), National Prisoner Statistics (NPS). December 2011 19 Table 19 Mortality rate per 100,000 state prisoners, by selected characteristics, 2001–2009 Characteristic Total Sex Male Female Race/Hispanic origina White Black/African American Hispanic/Latino American Indian or Alaska Native Asian Hawaiian or other Pacific Islander Otherb Age 17 or younger 18–24 25–34 35–44 45–54 55 or older 2001 242 2002 245 2003 258 2004 252 2005 253 2006 250 2007 257 2008 260 2009 257 250 129 252 151 266 153 259 162 260 164 258 141 265 145 267 172 264 160 316 219 202 324 220 200 348 230 183 342 228 184 351 225 177 343 220 213 358 231 196 375 216 213 366 225 195 219 78! 164 225 193 144! 224 265 240 204 175 135! 244 185! 251 327 212 338 335! 57! 335! 53! 325! 61! 237! 158 288! 39! 92! 132 328! 16! 167! 122 165! 23! 70! 39 64 181 586 2,031 33! 29 62 183 555 2,007 122! 26 68 184 557 2,033 40! 38 62 168 540 2,067 40! 35 59 162 560 2,102 36! 26 58 146 572 2,157 38! 30 51 131 543 2,500 122! 35 51 120 458 2,092 0 37 48 120 447 2,088 Note: Detail may not sum to total due to missing data. Data are from the Prisoners at Midyear series. Data may have been revised from previously published statistics to reflect updated information. State prison mortality rates are per 100,000 inmates held in state custody (including private facilities) on June 30th of each year. Prisoner demographic subgroup frequencies are estimated based on the June 30th National Prisoner Statistics (NPS) custody counts, demographic data from the National Corrections Reporting Program (NCRP), and the 2004 Survey of Inmates in State Correctional Facilities (SISCF). The mortality rates presented are calculated on exact population numbers. The mortality rates presented are not adjusted for age, sex, race, geographic location, or any other characteristic. Executions are not included; for data on executions, see Capital Punishment, 2009 - Statistical Tables. ! Interpret with caution; too few cases to provide a reliable rate. See Methodology for more information. aExcludes persons of Hispanic/Latino origin unless specified. bIncludes persons of two or more races or unknown race. Sources: Bureau of Justice Statistics, Deaths in Custody Reporting Program (DCRP), National Prisoner Statistics (NPS) and 2004 Survey of Inmates in State Correctional Facilities (SISCF). 20 Prison and Jail Deaths in Custody, 2000-2009 - Statistical Tables Table 20 Number of state prisoner deaths, by state, 2001–2009 State All statesa Alabama Alaskab Arizona Arkansas California Colorado Connecticutb Delawareb Florida Georgia Hawaiib Idaho Illinois Indiana Iowa Kansas Kentucky Louisiana Maine Maryland Massachusetts Michigan Minnesota Mississippi Missouri Montana Nebraska Nevada New Hampshire New Jersey New Mexico New York North Carolina North Dakota Ohio Oklahoma Oregon Pennsylvania Rhode Islandb South Carolina South Dakota Tennessee Texas Utah Vermontb Virginia Washington West Virginia Wisconsin Wyoming Federal prisoners 2001 2,877 87 8 65 42 288 42 30 16 182 93 7 17 86 47 9 21 36 72 6 70 29 114 13 36 57 6 7 27 2 69 11 175 67 3 115 51 24 122 3 71 4 51 408 5 3 71 29 17 49 5 301 2002 2,942 85 14 74 31 337 51 30 15 183 105 13 9 72 50 11 22 41 78 7 71 20 113 15 33 65 5 8 25 9 60 15 185 60 1 114 64 33 126 8 45 11 61 396 9 3 69 30 8 50 3 335 2003 3,165 92 4 84 39 333 47 36 19 221 126 8 12 80 56 13 32 45 70 2 67 30 127 13 58 65 12 7 24 6 59 11 198 74 1 91 71 25 147 8 63 11 97 383 10 5 93 32 15 41 2 346 2004 3,129 65 8 66 34 348 39 33 13 227 90 8 12 98 56 15 30 42 94 4 78 25 138 6 53 77 12 7 31 6 57 16 153 95 1 126 53 34 161 7 50 5 71 395 11 1 86 37 13 40 2 333 2005 3,172 66 4 78 38 366 54 40 19 244 122 8 13 72 45 19 19 43 89 0 57 37 140 13 63 68 12 8 28 8 61 18 170 69 1 121 75 37 149 2 75 4 76 351 8 6 84 45 10 29 8 388 2006 3,239 61 6 72 37 424 31 25 13 261 103 5 18 94 70 12 16 46 74 6 62 39 138 9 59 66 5 8 23 6 70 15 131 90 1 106 80 40 124 8 65 4 84 443 7 7 78 36 13 45 3 328 2007 3,392 54 10 61 46 395 42 27 15 249 143 13 15 104 54 17 20 46 83 1 57 39 117 13 77 78 5 12 39 6 60 22 148 99 0 123 98 36 150 9 72 8 73 436 7 1 103 39 19 43 8 368 2008 3,452 75 14 77 41 369 38 32 15 291 128 14 18 71 70 21 24 69 117 2 69 29 99 17 54 87 9 6 35 5 66 30 133 117 0 101 88 31 145 6 83 6 74 469 11 3 86 35 19 44 9 399 2009 3,408 80 7 85 50 392 49 29 12 278 125 11 13 75 91 14 20 57 108 4 56 29 148 12 52 81 3 11 35 9 58 21 142 86 0 120 79 28 165 7 49 4 69 426 17 3 87 44 18 42 7 376 Note: Data may have been revised from previously published statistics to reflect updated information. Executions are not included; for data on executions, see Capital Punishment, 2009 - Statistical Tables. aIncludes 9 prisoner deaths reported by the District of Columbia in 2001. As of December 30, 2001, sentenced felons from the District of Columbia were the responsibility of the Federal Bureau of Prisons (BOP). bPrisons and jails form one integrated system. Sources: Bureau of Justice Statistics, Deaths in Custody Reporting Program (DCRP) for state data, National Prisoner Statistics (NPS) for federal data through 2006, and personal communication with the Federal Bureau of Prisons (BOP) for federal data after 2006. December 2011 21 Table 21 Mortality rate per 100,000 state prisoners, by state, 2001–2009 State All statesa Alabama Alaskab Arizona Arkansas California Colorado Connecticutb Delawareb Florida Georgia Hawaiib Idaho Illinois Indiana Iowa Kansas Kentucky Louisiana Maine Maryland Massachusetts Michigan Minnesota Mississippi Missouri Montana Nebraska Nevada New Hampshire New Jersey New Mexico New York North Carolina North Dakota Ohio Oklahoma Oregon Pennsylvania Rhode Islandb South Carolina South Dakota Tennessee Texas Utah Vermontb Virginia Washington West Virginia Wisconsin Wyoming Federal prisoners 2001 243 365 192! 240 378 178 247 167 225 253 205 137 ! 323 188 242 111 ! 246 313 369 355 ! 293 278 236 208 242 202 227 ! 181 ! 271 86 ! 241 191 ! 252 211 296 ! 254 232 226 333 90 ! 331 150 ! 290 278 121 ! 216 ! 231 189 489 246 329 ! 220 2002 245 318 333 254 266 213 284 157 220 249 226 252 163 ! 167 250 135 ! 251 337 394 385 ! 293 199 226 223 214 218 171 ! 200 ! 248 363 ! 208 252 275 181 87 ! 254 288 291 321 221 ! 203 373 ! 343 268 219 ! 146 ! 223 187 225! 244 191 ! 232 2003 258 333 90 ! 275 343 207 252 187 280 286 268 151 ! 214 185 265 155 354 354 354 102! 278 298 256 178 365 215 420 169 ! 236 242 ! 224 179 ! 300 220 88 ! 200 326 210 363 226 ! 270 363 ! 501 247 227 ! 349 ! 299 198 392 188 126 ! 227 2004 252 261 179 ! 212 269 213 198 175 192 277 185 146 ! 204 221 256 174 327 336 480 201 ! 328 249 284 77 ! 334 256 490 173 ! 280 247 ! 217 252 236 270 82 ! 285 235 268 401 200 ! 214 158 ! 365 253 242 ! 49 ! 277 218 326 181 115 ! 208 2005 253 257 87 ! 240 302 223 266 210 275 287 256 140 ! 212 161 197 221 210 324 454 0 246 364 286 155 382 219 451 186 ! 251 326 ! 231 274 269 188 74 ! 273 326 290 363 59 ! 325 118 ! 391 224 168 ! 304 ! 271 272 252! 133 407 ! 233 2006 250 251 123 ! 202 293 242 144 128 183 295 200 86 ! 278 207 293 139 179 298 364 296 ! 270 365 272 100 ! 360 219 172 ! 176 ! 185 216 ! 239 220 206 239 72 ! 226 347 306 291 219 ! 284 111 ! 433 280 141 ! 327 ! 251 209 304 202 148 ! 192 2007 257 222 195 ! 165 349 224 187 135 205 268 269 230 207 228 215 193 225 301 398 47 ! 249 352 231 144 454 261 172 ! 269 299 205 ! 229 337 232 256 0 248 415 269 333 236! 308 237 ! 377 274 138 ! 46 ! 324 214 409 188 399 ! 211 2008 260 302 369 246 310 218 214 155 208 327 237 412 334 155 295 240 277 537 559 92 ! 301 256 196 217 419 290 552 ! 134 ! 269 173 ! 261 871 214 298 0 209 488 230 323 154 ! 339 181 ! 515 335 213 ! 190 ! 265 205 383 196 735 ! 229 2009 257 316 183 ! 274 377 230 275 146 174 304 253 324 ! 248 165 370 166 232 435 527 197 ! 246 255 314 136 433 266 175 ! 242 ! 275 316 ! 268 602 238 211 0 245 433 203 335 189 ! 201 118 ! 481 308 329 195 ! 280 262 360 189 454 ! 181 Note: Data are from the Prisoners at Midyear series. Data may have been revised from previously published statistics to reflect updated information. State prison mortality rates are per 100,000 inmates held in state custody (including private facilities) on June 30th of each year. Federal prison mortality rates are per 100,000 inmates held in federal custody on December 31st of each year. Deaths in federal prisons are not included in the calculation of rates across all states. The state-specific population frequencies used in these calculations are the latest available, and may not reflect updates that have been made to the total number of state prison inmates. Mortality rates between states are not directly comparable because rates are not adjusted for age, sex, race, geographic location, or any other characteristic. Executions are not included; for data on executions, see Capital Punishment, 2009 - Statistical Tables. ! Interpret with caution; too few cases to provide a reliable rate. See Methodology for more information. aIncludes 9 prisoner deaths reported by the District of Columbia in 2001. As of December 31, 2001, sentenced felons from the District of Columbia were the responsibility of the Federal Bureau of Prisons (BOP). bPrisons and jails form one integrated system. Sources: Bureau of Justice Statistics, Deaths in Custody Reporting Program (DCRP) for state data, National Prisoner Statistics (NPS) for federal data through 2006, and personal communication with the Federal Bureau of Prisons (BOP) for federal data after 2006. 22 Prison and Jail Deaths in Custody, 2000-2009 - Statistical Tables Table 22 Number of state prisoner deaths, by cause of death and selected characteristics, 2001–2009 Characteristic Total Sex Male Female Race/Hispanic originb White Black/African American Hispanic/Latino American Indian or Alaska Native Asian Hawaiian or other Pacific Islander Otherc Age 17 or younger 18–24 25–34 35–44 45–54 55 or older Heart disease 7,368 Cancer 6,661 Illness Liver disease 2,056 7,110 258 6,425 236 1,992 64 1,391 77 7,514 434 1,697 85 444 4 346 14 253 10 398 22 3,881 2,804 593 3,564 2,440 538 1,081 513 404 294 998 164 3,845 2,993 974 1,042 375 295 208 149 77 205 67 72 143 79 32 194 182 33 48 14 54 23 41 4 5 3 64 27 20 26 4 4 11 2 5 2 4 3 11 13 10 15 8 3 0 3 7 20 10 8 1 4 0 3 1 0 1 2 0 69 365 1,162 2,099 3,671 1 26 169 783 2,141 3,536 0 5 39 332 1,058 622 0 14 194 639 487 134 2 141 497 1,362 2,528 3,411 8 259 594 527 293 102 1 58 123 132 92 42 0 22 103 132 78 25 1 22 57 70 63 50 0 15 53 85 115 150 AIDSrelated 1,468 All other illnessesa 7,948 Suicide 1,783 Drug/alcohol Other/ Homicide intoxication Accident unknown 448 360 263 421 Note: Detail may not sum to total due to missing data. Data may have been revised from previously published statistics to reflect updated information. Executions are not included; for data on executions, see Capital Punishment, 2009 - Statistical Tables. aIn 2007, a high number of cases were missing cause of death information. These cases were classified as all other illnesses. bExcludes persons of Hispanic/Latino origin unless specified. cIncludes persons of two or more races or unknown race. Source: Bureau of Justice Statistics, Deaths in Custody Reporting Program (DCRP). December 2011 23 Table 23 Percent of state prisoner deaths, by cause of death and selected characteristics, 2001-2009 Heart disease Characteristic Total 100% Sex Male 96.5% Female 3.5 Race/Hispanic originb White 52.7% Black/ African American 38.1 Hispanic/Latino 8.0 American Indian or Alaska Native 0.7 Asian 0.2 Hawaiian or other Pacific Islander 0.1 Otherc 0.2 Age 17 or younger 0.0% 18–24 0.9 25–34 5.0 35–44 15.8 45–54 28.5 55 or older 49.8 Cancer 100% Illness Liver disease 100% 96.5% 3.5 96.9% 3.1 94.8% 5.2 53.5% 36.6 8.1 52.6% 25.0 19.6 0.8 0.3 AIDS- All other related illnessesa 100% 100% Drug/alcohol intoxication Accident 100% 100% Other/ unknown 100% Suicide 100% Homicide 100% 94.5% 5.5 95.2% 4.8 99.1% 0.9 96.1% 3.9 96.2% 3.8 94.5% 5.2 20.0% 68.0 11.2 48.4% 37.7 12.3 58.4% 21.0 16.5 46.4% 33.3 17.2 56.9% 18.6 20.0 54.4% 30.0 12.2 46.1% 43.2 7.8 2.0 0.2 0.3 0.2 0.8 0.3 1.1 1.5 0.9 0.9 3.1 0.6 1.9 0.8 1.0 0.7 0.2 0.2 0.4 0.2 0.0 0.2 0.1 0.4 0.6 0.4 0.2 0.9 0.0 0.8 0.4 0.0 0.2 0.5 0.0% 0.4 2.5 11.8 32.1 53.1 0.0% 0.2 1.9 16.1 51.5 30.3 0.0% 1.0 13.2 43.5 33.2 9.1 0.0% 1.8 6.3 17.1 31.8 42.9 0.4% 14.5 33.3 29.6 16.4 5.7 0.2% 12.9 27.5 29.5 20.5 9.4 0.0% 6.1 28.6 36.7 21.7 6.9 0.4% 8.4 21.7 26.6 24.0 19.0 0.0% 3.6 12.6 20.2 27.3 35.6 Note: Detail may not sum to total due to missing data. Data may have been revised from previously published statistics to reflect updated information. Executions are not included; for data on executions, see Capital Punishment, 2009 - Statistical Tables. aIn 2007, a high number of cases were missing cause of death information. These cases were classified as all other illnesses. bExcludes persons of Hispanic/Latino origin unless specified. cIncludes persons of two or more races or unknown race. Source: Bureau of Justice Statistics, Deaths in Custody Reporting Program (DCRP). 24 Prison and Jail Deaths in Custody, 2000-2009 - Statistical Tables Table 24 Mortality rate per 100,000 state prisoners, by cause of death and selected characteristics, 2001–2009 Characteristic Total Sex Male Female Race/Hispanic originb White Black/African American Hispanic/Latino American Indian or Alaska Native Asian Hawaiian or other Pacific Islander Otherc Age 17 or younger 18–24 25–34 35–44 45–54 55 or older Heart disease 65 Cancer 59 Illness Liver disease 18 67 33 61 30 19 8 13 10 71 55 16 11 4 1! 3 2 2 1! 4 3 93 59 37 86 52 33 26 11 25 7 21 10 93 63 60 25 8 18 5 3 5 5 1 4 3 2 2 5 4 2 40 28 45 45 34 8! 4! 6! 54 53 17 51 3! 8! 9! 4! 4! 4! 3! 6! 56! 13 51! 15 41! 3! 0 3! 36! 20 51! 8! 5! 4! 0 3! 5! 0 5! 2! 0 4 10 34 124 664 4! 1 5 23 127 639 0 -1 10 63 113 0 1 5 19 29 24 9! 7 13 40 149 617 34! 13 16 16 17 18 4! 3 3 4 5 8 0 1 3 4 5 5 4! 1 2 2 4 9 0 1 1 3 7 27 AIDS- All other related illnessesa 13 70 Suicide 16 Drug/alcohol Homicide intoxication 4 3 Other/ Accident unknown 2 4 Note: Detail may not sum to total due to missing data. Data are from the Prisoners at Midyear series. Data may have been revised from previously published statistics to reflect updated information. State prison mortality rates are per 100,000 inmates held in state custody (including private facilities) on June 30th of each year. Prisoner demographic subgroup frequencies are estimated based on the June 30th National Prisoner Statistics (NPS) custody counts, demographic data from the National Corrections Reporting Program (NCRP), and the 2004 Survey of Inmates in State Correctional Facilities (SISCF). The mortality rates presented are calculated on exact population numbers. The mortality rates presented are not adjusted for age, sex, race, geographic location, or any other characteristic. Executions are not included; for data on executions, see Capital Punishment, 2009 - Statistical Tables. -- Less than 0.5. ! Interpret with caution; too few cases to provide a reliable rate. See Methodology for more information. aIn 2007, a high number of cases were missing cause of death information. These cases were classified as all other illnesses. bExcludes persons of Hispanic/Latino origin unless specified. cIncludes persons of two or more races or unknown race. Sources: Bureau of Justice Statistics, Deaths in Custody Reporting Program (DCRP), National Prisoner Statistics (NPS) and 2004 Survey of Inmates in State Correctional Facilities (SISCF). December 2011 25 Table 25 Number of state prisoner deaths, by cause of death and state, 2001–2009 Illness State All statesb Alabama Alaskac Arizona Arkansas California Colorado Connecticutc Delawarec Florida Georgia Hawaiic Idaho Illinois Indiana Iowa Kansas Kentucky Louisiana Maine Maryland Massachusetts Michigan Minnesota Mississippi Missouri Montana Nebraska Nevada New Hampshire New Jersey New Mexico New York North Carolina North Dakota Ohio Oklahoma Oregon Pennsylvania Rhode Islandc South Carolina South Dakota Tennessee Texas Utah Vermontc Virginia Washington West Virginia Wisconsin Wyoming Federal prisoners All causes 28,776 665 75 662 358 3,252 393 282 137 2,136 1,035 87 127 752 539 131 204 425 785 32 587 277 1,134 111 485 644 69 74 267 57 560 159 1,435 757 8 1,017 659 288 1,289 58 573 57 656 3,707 85 31 757 327 132 383 47 3,174 Heart disease 7,368 145 14 150 99 460 66 66 25 433 348 19 35 214 155 30 48 144 195 10 130 81 411 21 211 198 12 15 64 8 154 27 361 193 3 327 159 65 385 12 227 21 205 951 19 9 196 72 56 103 15 … Liver AIDS- All other Cancer disease related illnessesa 6,661 2,056 1,468 7,948 132 45 31 227 6 4 0 24 147 76 19 190 77 12 19 109 655 284 106 1,180 56 51 0 159 30 40 4 94 19 5 17 47 579 122 222 645 262 66 66 199 16 11 2 20 36 5 1 29 201 42 55 147 108 40 14 145 45 4 2 32 50 19 1 64 113 22 22 108 229 36 78 171 8 3 1 6 107 22 93 110 59 16 6 69 302 44 33 247 30 9 1 32 102 18 15 103 154 67 16 151 17 12 0 16 12 8 2 19 53 14 9 66 17 6 2 14 118 25 72 130 39 15 2 52 315 69 183 337 224 51 44 192 1 1 0 2 283 47 27 256 150 68 16 161 81 29 4 70 301 114 29 368 9 1 3 7 94 28 28 155 5 6 0 12 143 39 33 172 782 333 119 1,211 8 4 0 24 4 6 3 1 241 56 43 156 86 35 9 91 40 2 4 25 109 20 10 82 6 3 1 17 … … 139 2,757 Suicide 1,783 10 13 48 24 285 30 42 15 62 52 15 16 65 39 16 12 11 16 2 48 25 60 15 20 36 9 3 17 8 30 15 107 27 1 54 32 21 60 13 20 8 28 224 21 5 28 19 3 50 3 137 Drug/alcohol Other/ Homicide intoxication Accident unknown 448 360 263 421 6 1 7 61 2 5 6 1 11 16 2 3 8 1 7 2 113 111 23 35 8 14 9 0 2 2 2 0 2 0 0 7 29 5 17 22 21 1 10 10 2 0 1 1 2 0 1 2 9 6 8 5 12 12 8 6 0 0 0 2 2 2 5 1 1 1 2 1 4 0 3 53 1 1 0 0 22 44 4 7 1 9 4 7 6 9 14 8 0 2 1 0 4 3 8 1 11 4 5 2 1 1 1 0 0 3 1 11 6 1 2 35 0 2 0 0 7 8 5 11 4 4 1 0 12 13 18 20 8 2 14 2 0 0 0 0 12 1 5 5 33 15 9 16 2 8 4 4 7 6 7 12 1 3 3 6 16 1 2 2 2 0 3 0 15 12 4 5 31 13 25 18 2 3 1 3 0 3 0 0 4 1 3 29 5 3 4 3 1 1 0 0 0 4 3 2 0 1 1 0 73 … 40 28 Note: Detail may not sum to total due to missing data. Data may have been revised from previously published statistics to reflect updated information. Executions are not included; for data on executions, see Capital Punishment, 2009 - Statistical Tables. … Not available. With the exception of AIDS-related deaths, the Federal Bureau of Prisons (BOP) did not break out illness deaths by a specific cause of death (e.g., cancer and liver disease). aIn 2007, a high number of cases were missing cause of death information. These cases were classified as all other illnesses. bIncludes 9 prisoner deaths reported by the District of Columbia in 2001. As of December 30, 2001, sentenced felons from the District of Columbia were the responsibility of the Federal Bureau of Prisons (BOP). cPrisons and jails form one integrated system. Sources: Bureau of Justice Statistics, Deaths in Custody Reporting Program (DCRP) for state data, National Prisoner Statistics (NPS) for federal data through 2006, and personal communication with the Federal Bureau of Prisons (BOP) for federal data after 2006. 26 Prison and Jail Deaths in Custody, 2000-2009 - Statistical Tables Table 26 Mortality rate per 100,000 state prisoners, by cause of death and state, 2001–2009 State All statesb Alabama Alaskac Arizona Arkansas California Colorado Connecticutc Delawarec Florida Georgia Hawaiic Idaho Illinois Indiana Iowa Kansas Kentucky Louisiana Maine Maryland Massachusetts Michigan Minnesota Mississippi Missouri Montana Nebraska Nevada New Hampshire New Jersey New Mexico New York North Carolina North Dakota Ohio Oklahoma Oregon Pennsylvania Rhode Islandc South Carolina South Dakota Tennessee Texas Utah Vermontc Virginia Washington West Virginia Wisconsin Wyoming Federal prisoners All Heart causes disease 253 65 292 64 190 35 232 53 321 89 217 31 227 38 162 38 218 40 284 58 233 79 193 42 241 66 186 53 266 76 171 39 256 60 358 121 434 108 179 56! 279 62 291 85 255 92 156 30 355 154 239 73 304 53 193 39 258 62 241 34! 234 64 311 53 248 62 232 59 70! 26! 244 78 339 82 255 57 340 101 179 37 275 109 197 73 407 127 273 70 201 45 198 58! 269 70 218 48 350 149 196 53 310 99 213 … Illness Liver Cancer disease 59 18 58 20 15! 10! 51 27 69 11 44 19 32 29 17 23 30 8! 77 16 59 15 36 24! 68 9! 50 10 53 20 59 5! 63 24 95 19 127 20 45! 17! 51 10 62 17 68 10 42 13! 75 13 57 25 75 53 31 21! 51 14 72 25! 49 10 76 29 54 12 69 16 9! 9! 68 11 77 35 72 26 79 30 28! 3! 45 13 17! 21! 89 24 58 25 19! 9! 26! 38! 86 20 57 23 106 5! 56 10 40! 20! … … AIDS- All other related illnessesa 13 70 14 100 0 61 7 67 17 98 7 79 0 92 2! 54 27 75 30 86 15 45 4! 44 2! 55 14 36 7 72 3! 42 1! 80 19 91 43 95 6! 34! 44 52 6! 72 7 56 1! 45 11 75 6 56 0 71 5! 49 9! 64 8! 59 30 54 4 102 32 58 13 59 0 18! 6 61 8 83 4! 62 8 97 9! 22! 13 74 0 42 20 107 9 89 0 57 19! 6! 15 55 6! 61 11! 66 5! 42 7! 112 9 185 Suicide 16 4! 33 17 21 19 17 24 24 8 12 33 30 16 19 21 15 9! 9 11! 23 26 13 21 15 13 40! 8! 16 34! 13 29 18 8 9! 13 16 19 16 40 10 28! 17 16 50 32! 10 13 8! 26 20! 9 Drug/alcohol Homicide intoxication 4 3 3! 0! 5! 13! 4! 6 7! 1! 8 7 5! 8 1! 1! 3! 0 4 1! 5 0! 4! 0 4! 0 2! 1! 6 6 0 0 3! 3! 1! 1! 2! 0 6! 6! 10 21 1! 9! 1! 2! 0 3! 3! 2! 4! 1! 4! 4! 0 8! 6! 1! 0 8! 3! 3! 8! 8! 2 2 2! 1! 0 0 3 0! 17 8 2! 7! 2! 2! 3! 9! 8 0! 7! 0 9 7 2 1 5! 7! 0 19! 1! 0! 3! 2! 3! 3! 0 2! 0 7! 5 … Accident 2 3! 15! 1! 6! 2 5! 1! 0 2 2! 2! 2! 2! 4! 0 6! 2! 2! 0 2! 4! 3 1! 6! 2! 4! 3! 2! 0 2! 2! 3 4 0 1! 5! 4! 2! 9! 1! 10! 2! 2 2! 0 1! 3! 0 2! 7! 3 Other/ unknown 4 27 3! 1! 2! 2 0 0 11! 3 2! 2! 4! 1! 3! 3! 1! 1! 29 0 3! 7! 2! 0 1! 1! 0 29! 34 0 5! 0 3 1! 0 1! 8 4! 3 19! 1! 0 3! 1 7! 0 10 2! 0 1! 0 2 Note: Detail may not sum to total due to missing data. Data are from the Prisoners at Midyear series. Data may have been revised from previously published statistics to reflect updated information. State prison mortality rates are per 100,000 inmates held in state custody (including private facilities) on June 30th of each year. Federal prison mortality rates are per 100,000 inmates held in federal custody on December 31st of each year. Deaths in federal prisons are not included in the calculation of rates across all states. The state-specific population frequencies used in these calculations are the latest available, and may not reflect updates that have been made to the total number of state prison inmates. The mortality rates presented are not adjusted for age, sex, race, geographic location, or any other characteristic. Executions are not included; for data on executions, see Capital Punishment, 2009 - Statistical Tables. … Not available. With the exception of AIDS-related deaths, the Federal Bureau of Prisons (BOP) did not break out illness deaths by a specific cause of death (e.g., cancer and liver disease). ! Interpret with caution; too few cases to provide a reliable rate. See Methodology for more information. aIn 2007, a high number of cases were missing cause of death information. These cases were classified as all other illnesses. bIncludes 9 prisoner deaths reported by the District of Columbia in 2001. As of December 30, 2001, sentenced felons from the District of Columbia were the responsibility of the Federal Bureau of Prisons (BOP). cPrisons and jails form one integrated system. Sources: Bureau of Justice Statistics, Deaths in Custody Reporting Program (DCRP) for state data, National Prisoner Statistics (NPS) for federal data through 2006, and personal communication with the Federal Bureau of Prisons (BOP) for federal data after 2006. December 2011 27 Methodology The Deaths in Custody Reporting Program (DCRP) is an annual data collection conducted by the Bureau of Justice Statistics (BJS). The DCRP collects data on persons who have died while in the custody of the 50 state departments of correction and in the roughly 3,000 local adult jail jurisdictions nationwide. The DCRP began in 2000 under the Death in Custody Reporting Act of 2000 (P.L. 106-297). It is the only national statistical collection that obtains detailed information about deaths in adult correctional facilities. BJS uses DCRP data to report national trends in the number and causes (or manners) of deaths occurring in state prison or local jail custody. Information about decedents collected for the DCRP include selected demographic characteristics, such as sex, age, race, and Hispanic ethnicity; facility type of death (prison or jail); date of admission; conviction status; admission offense; circumstances surrounding the death, including cause of death, time and location of death; and information on whether an autopsy was conducted and the availability of results to the respondent. In cases of illness deaths, the DCRP collects data on whether the decedent had a preexisting condition and whether he or she received medical treatment for this condition prior to death. Executions are collected under the separate BJS Capital Punishment series. Data on executions are accessible through the BJS website at www.bjs.gov. Statistics presented in this report are current as of September 1, 2011. DCRP mortality data are accessible on the BJS website. For more information on mortality in correctional settings, see Mortality in Local Jails, 2000-2007 (NCJ 222988, BJS Web, July 2010); Medical Causes of Death in State Prisons, 2001-2004 (NCJ 216340, BJS Web, January 2007); and Suicide and Homicide in State Prisons and Local Jails (NCJ 210036, BJS Web, August 2005). Scope of the DCRP The prison component of the DCRP collects data on inmate deaths occurring in the 50 state departments of corrections while inmates are in the physical custody of prison officials. Starting in 2001 and annually thereafter, BJS has collected DCRP data directly from state prison systems. Since beginning the collection, BJS has maintained a 100% response rate from the state prison system respondents to the DCRP. 28 The DCRP’s jail component includes inmate deaths occurring in all local adult jail jurisdictions nationwide. A jail jurisdiction is a legal entity that has responsibility for managing jail facilities. Jail jurisdictions typically operate at the county level, in which a sheriff or executive manages the local facilities. The DCRP data identify the facilities in which a jail death occurs, but the DCRP data are arrayed at the jail jurisdiction level. BJS defines a jail as locally-operated correctional facility that confines persons before or after adjudication for more than 72 hours. BJS does not include temporary lockups in its definition of jail facilities. Typically, there is one facility per jail jurisdiction, but the 2006 Census of Jail Facilities found that 15% of jail jurisdictions had multiple facilities under its authority. See the BJS website for more information. The jail universe file includes all currently operating jails as well as jails that have closed, consolidated, or otherwise eliminated operations. The most recent jail universe, constructed in 2009, identified 2,825 jurisdictions, representing 3,223 jail facilities. Of these, 2,755 (97.5%) participated in the 2009 DCRP. Administration of the DCRP The DCRP collection forms are provided annually to state prison and local jail respondents. Respondents provide an aggregate count of the number of deaths occurring during the referenced calendar year, in addition to individuallevel decedent data. For state prison system respondents, aggregate counts are obtained through the NPS-4 (available at http://bjs.gov/content/pub/pdf/nps410.pdf). For local jails, aggregate counts of deaths are obtained through the CJ-9A (available at http://bjs.gov/content/pub/pdf/cj9a10.pdf). BJS requests jail administrators to provide statistics about their population and bookings through the summary form in addition to a death count. All jails, even those with no deaths to report, a scenario that applies to about 80% of jails in any given year, are asked to complete the annual summary form. BJS obtains a separate report describing the decedent’s characteristics and the circumstances surrounding the death for each death occurring in a state prison or local jail. The survey forms used to obtain data on each prison and jail death are available on the BJS website: Prison deaths (NPS-4A form): http://bjs.gov/content/pub/ pdf/nps4a10.pdf Jail deaths (CJ-9): http://bjs.gov/content/pub/pdf/cj910.pdf State prison and local jail respondents may submit individual records on decedents at any time during a collection cycle through a BJS web-based collection system, accessible on the BJS website at https://bjsdcrp.rti.org/. Prison and Jail Deaths in Custody, 2000-2009 - Statistical Tables BJS has modified the survey forms slightly over time. Most of the changes have been minor and intended to clarify existing questions and ease respondent burden. In 2001, additional items on medical treatment in prisons and jails were added to collect data on medical treatment received by the inmate prior to death. Text boxes added to the forms in 2008 allowed respondents to elaborate on deaths due to intoxication, suicide, and inmate-involved homicide. Such fields had previously only been available for deaths due to illness, accident, homicide not caused by other inmates, and other unspecified reasons. BJS removed a question measuring the conviction status of an inmate (since more than 99% of prison inmates were convicted at the time of their deaths). BJS also changed the survey layout in 2009 to simplify the progression through questions related to autopsies. The revised item instructed respondents to complete the entire form after autopsy results were available (rather than submitting an initially-incomplete form where autopsy results were pending). Determining eligibility for reporting to the DCRP In the DCRP, custody refers to the holding of an inmate in a facility or while a correctional authority maintains a chain of custody over an inmate. For instance, if a jail transports an ill inmate to a hospital for medical services and that inmate dies while in the chain of custody of the jail, that death is counted as a death in the DCRP. A death that occurs when an inmate is not in the custody of correctional authority is considered to be beyond the scope of the DCRP. This includes deaths of inmates on escape status and those serving time on community corrections (probation, parole, or home-electronic monitoring). Legal executions are also beyond the scope of the DCRP. For more information on executions, see the Capital Punishment series on the BJS website. BJS instructs both state prison and local jail officials to determine first whether the inmate was in the physical custody of the jurisdiction at the time of death, regardless of the reason an inmate was being held. For state prisons, this includes the deaths of inmates held in any private prison facility under contract to the department of corrections as well as deaths in any of their state-operated facilities, including halfway houses, prison camps or farms, training or treatment centers, and prison hospitals. BJS instructs state prison officials to exclude deaths of inmates who were transferred to local jails due to overcrowding or other reasons but who were still serving a prison term. The DCRP obtains information about these deaths through the jail reports. For jails, deaths in custody includes deaths of inmates who were temporarily out of the physical custody of a facility but within the chain of custody of the jail. Typically, these include deaths of jail inmates December 2011 who have been transferred to offsite facilities that care for critically-ill persons. Over half (51%) of jail inmate deaths occurred in medical facilities outside of the jail facility between 2000 and 2009. Custody is further complicated by the dual law enforcement and jail administration functions of some sheriffs’ departments. As a result, some deaths reported as jail deaths actually occurred before the jail had custody of the decedent. BJS excludes these deaths in the process of arrest by using information about the circumstances surrounding the death. Identifying and excluding duplicates Duplicate death records may exist in DCRP due to overlapping correctional populations as well as overlapping duties within correctional facilities. For example, a jail jurisdiction may have more than one reporting unit responsible for reporting data to BJS, or a jail may be holding a state prison inmate. Multiple reporting entities may report the same death, or state prison systems may report on the death of an inmate who was transferred to a local jail but was serving a prison sentence at the time. BJS’ process for identifying duplicate death records is as follows: First, BJS reconciles the aggregate summary counts of deaths occurring during a calendar year with the number of individual death records obtained from a reporting jurisdiction. When BJS identifies discrepancies, it contacts reporting jurisdictions for clarification. Second, BJS performs record-matching to identify duplicate records within jurisdictions. The matching is based on inmate name and date of birth, date of death, and date of admission to the facility. BJS’ review of death records between 2000 and 2009 found 83 jail and 294 prison deaths to be duplicates or beyond the scope of DCRP. These records were excluded from all DCRP analyses. Cause of death information BJS aims to collect accurate information about the cause of death. The instructions for completing the DCRP tell respondents to report death information as determined by an autopsy or other official medical death investigation. Death by intoxication, accident, suicide, and homicide are considered discrete causes of death. While there is a distinction between manner and cause of death from a medico-legal standpoint, no such distinction is made in the DCRP. When reporting deaths due to accident or homicide, BJS requests respondents to describe the events surrounding these deaths. BJS added a text field to the survey forms so that respondents could provide more detailed information on suicide and intoxication deaths. See Administration of the DCRP. 29 Due to the variation in deaths caused by illness, respondents report the cause of death as determined by an autopsy. These causes are later converted by clinical data specialists into standard medical codes according to the World Health Organization’s International Statistical Classification of Diseases and Related Health Problems, Tenth Revision (ICD-10). Other BJS Sources of Correctional Mortality Data BJS maintains other data collections on correctional mortality and deaths in the process of arrest. These other collections include— Capital Punishment, which provides data on legal executions. (See the BJS website for further discussion of executions.) The National Prisoner Statistics (NPS), which prior to the establishment of the DCRP, annually collected aggregate counts of deaths in state and federal prisons. Prior to 2007, the NPS collected aggregate counts of deaths occurring in state and federal prisons, and counts of deaths by broad categories of death, specifically deaths due to execution, illness, AIDS, suicide, accident, homicide, and other causes. After 2007, the Federal Bureau of Prisons (BOP) continued to submit the counts of deaths for these broad categories while state prison officials no longer provided counts of deaths via the NPS. (See the BJS website for further discussion of the NPS.) The Census of Jail Inmates, which is conducted every five to six years and provides counts of inmate deaths in local jails. (See the BJS website for further discussion of the Census of Jail Inmates). The Survey of Jails in Indian Country (SJIC), which provides aggregate counts of the number of deaths occurring in Indian country correctional facilities operated by tribal authorities or the U.S. Department of Interior’s Bureau of Indian Affairs. (See the BJS website for further discussion of the SJIC.) Arrest-Related Deaths (ARD), which obtains data on deaths occurring during the process of arrest. BJS relies on state-level respondents to provide details of deaths occurring during arrest. (See the BJS website for further discussion of ARD.) Reported statistics Mortality rates are calculated per 100,000 inmates where the denominators provide estimates of the number of person-years of exposure in custody in institutional corrections. The mortality rate for state prisons is calculated as the number of deaths per year divided by the midyear 30 state prison population in custody multiplied by 100,000. Midyear custody counts for state prisons provide estimates for person-years for prison populations. BJS uses data from its National Prisoner Statistics (NPS) collection to provide midyear custody counts of prisoners. For more information on the NPS, see the BJS website. The mortality rate in local jails is calculated as the number of deaths per year divided by the average daily jail inmate population (ADP) multiplied by 100,000. The ADP for local jails is defined as the average daily number of jail inmates held in a jail jurisdiction during a calendar year. The use of the ADP as the denominator for jail mortality rates is based on the high turnover and daily fluctuation in local jail populations. The ADP better reflects the number of inmate days per year than does any one day count. The jail ADP also reflects the annual number of admissions and mean length of stay, and can be expressed as the product of these two values. When mean length of stay is expressed in years, the ADP is equivalent to the number of person-years spent by jail inmates during a given year. Starting in 2002, BJS collected the ADP directly from respondents using the summary form, CJ-9. Prior to 2002, BJS calculated the jail ADP by taking the average of the January 1st count and the December 31st count from the reference year, which is a proxy measure for ADP. Both denominators provide data for annualizing mortality rates, which are calculated separately for each key statistic, by group or by characteristic. The annualized mortality rates by cause of death in state prisons and local jails are comparable to annual crude mortality rates reported by the National Center for Health Statistics (NCHS). NCHS calculates crude mortality rates as the number of events for a period (e.g., year) divided by the population estimate at the midpoint of the period. For general population mortality statistics, NCHS employs the midyear population as an approximation to the average population exposed to risk of death during any given year. (For more information, see Siegal, J. & Swanson, D. (2004), The Methods and Materials of Demography, Second Edition, San Diego, CA: Elsevier Academic Press, p. 269.) The crude mortality rates reported in the DCRP annual statistical tables for particular segments of the incarcerated population are not directly comparable to the crude mortality rates within the (non-incarcerated) general population. In addition, the crude mortality rates in state prisons are not directly comparable to those of local jails. Since the age, race, and sex composition of the general population differs from that in state prisons and local jails, and since mortality is correlated with age, race, and sex, the crude mortality rates in state prisons and local jails should Prison and Jail Deaths in Custody, 2000-2009 - Statistical Tables not be compared directly to one another, or to the general population. Estimating inmate population characteristics for use in calculating mortality rates by demographic subgroups BJS does not obtain annual data for all demographic characteristics of prison and jail inmates in all jurisdictions. BJS uses data from sources other than the DCRP to estimate the nationwide age, race, and sex composition of state prison and local jail inmate populations. These data sources consist primarily of periodic surveys of inmates in custody in prisons and jails. The inmate characteristic distributions obtained from these surveys are applied to denominators (counts of inmates or ADP) to estimate the number of inmates in each demographic subgroup. BJS estimated the demographic distribution of the state prison population data from the National Prisoner Statistics (NPS) and National Corrections Reporting Program (NCRP) collections. For a discussion on the methodology for obtaining estimates of the age, race, and sex distributions of state prisoners, see Prisoners in 2009 (NCJ 231675, BJS web, December 2010). Prior BJS reports of mortality rates for state prison inmates used demographic distributions derived from BJS’ 2004 Survey of Inmates in State and Federal Correctional Facilities (SISCF). Consequently, the state prison mortality rates shown in these tables may differ from previously published rates. A rate comparison between the two sources showed very little difference in the resultant mortality rates. In most instances, the rates either matched or nearly matched. To estimate the distributions of demographic attributes of the ADP for local jail inmates, BJS used data from several surveys to generate distributions of age, race, and sex, and applied these distributions to the ADP. BJS’ Annual Survey of Jails (ASJ) provided estimates of the race, ethnic, and sex distribution of local jail inmates for each year of the DCRP collection and applied these to each year’s ADP from the DCRP to estimate the average daily population of persons in these demographic categories. For more information on the ASJ, see Jail Inmates at Midyear 2010 - Statistical Tables (NCJ 233431, BJS Web, April 2011). Unlike sex and race/ethnicity data, BJS does not annually collect data on age in jail populations. BJS obtained estimates of the age distribution of jail inmates from the 2002 Survey of Inmates in Local Jails (SILJ) and the 2007 and 2008-09 National Inmate Survey (NIS) available on the BJS website. For more information about jail inmates, see Profile of Jail Inmates, 2002 (NCJ 201932, BJS Web, July 2004). December 2011 To estimate the age distribution of the jail inmate population, we first obtained an estimate of the number of jail inmates under age 18 from the Annual Survey of Jails (ASJ). Between 2000 and 2010, the number of jail inmates under age 18 has ranged between 6,100 and 7,615, according to Jail Inmates at Midyear 2010 (table 6). By applying the annual percentage of jail inmates under age 18 to the annual average daily jail inmate population, we estimated the average daily population of jail inmates under age 18. To estimate the age distribution of adult jail inmates, BJS used data from the Survey of Inmates in Local Jails (SILJ) and the National Inmate Survey (NIS). We used the SILJ estimates to cover the period from 2000 to 2006 and the NIS estimates to cover the period from 2007 to 2009. In each case, we applied the percentages associated with each age category to the adults in jail average daily population. Random error and suppression The DCRP data on deaths in state prisons and local jails are not subject to sampling error. However, mortality data from a complete or near complete enumeration may be subject to random error. Following Brillinger and NCHS, “the number of deaths that actually occurred may be considered as one of a large series of possible results that could have arisen under the same set of circumstances” (NCHS, 2007). The random variation can be large when the number of deaths is small; hence, considerable caution is warranted when interpreting statistics based on small numbers of deaths. According to NCHS standards, mortality rates based on fewer than 100 deaths per year should be interpreted with caution. For more information on vital rates, see Brillinger, D. R. (1986), “The natural variability of vital rates and associated statistics,” Biometrics 42:693-734. See also the National Vital Statistics Reports. Deaths: Final Data for 2007, Centers for Disease Control and Prevention, National Center for Health Statistics, retrieved from http://www.cdc.gov/nchs/data/ nvsr/nvsr58/nvsr58_19.pdf. Further following NCHS and Brillinger, we quantify random variation by assuming that the appropriate underlying distribution is a Poisson probability distribution. This provides for a computationally simple as well as reasonable approach to estimate variances for mortality statistics when the probability of dying is low. We calculated variances based on the assumption of a Poisson process and from these variances calculated relative random error estimates, which are comparable to relative standard error, in that the relative random error is the ratio of random error derived from the Poisson variance to the number of deaths. Following NCHS, when the relative random error exceeded 30%, we flagged estimated mortality rates due to the instability of the rate. 31 tool to encourage online response. These modifications led to delays in implementing the collection. As a result, individual death reports were collected retrospectively for the first time, rather than in the year the death occurred. Survey performance issues Survey administration and modifications to the survey form generated data for years 2007 through 2009 that may not be wholly compatible with prior DCRP data. In 2007, state prison officials categorized a large number of illness deaths as all other illnesses, which led to a high degree of missing data on illness causes of death. In 2008, local jail officials were unable to provide causes of death for 22% of jail inmate deaths. During 2009, BJS made modifications to the collection instruments to improve reporting and reduce burden. Item nonresponse in 2007: The number of illness deaths categorized as all other illnesses was overstated in the 2007 prison death reports. This arose from a high degree of item nonresponse in the text box requesting specific illness designation on the prisoner death form (NPS-4A). Since the “all other illnesses” category included unknown or unspecified illnesses, we were able to classify deaths within this broad category into specific causes when respondents reported an illness death and the additional cause of death information. Throughout the DCRP prison collection, state departments of corrections respondents were unable to provide more detailed information on an average of 17 illness deaths per year between 2001 and 2006. During 2007, this frequency increased to 173 deaths. Since many of these deaths would likely have been classified in the most common illness categories (e.g., heart disease, cancer, or liver disease), the number of known illness deaths was low in 2007 relative to prior years. The distribution of illness deaths in state prisons during 2007 reflect only the deaths for which specific illness determinations could be made. Item nonresponse in 2008 jail data and unknown cause of death: An abnormally large number of cases were missing a response for cause of death in the 2008 jail file (n=209; 21.8% of all jail deaths in 2008). This coincided with the final year the U.S. Census Bureau acted as the data collection agent for DCRP. In prior years of the DCRP jail data collection, an average of 6% of all deaths were classified as having other or unknown causes of death. For the purposes of this report, BJS categorized the cause of death for these 209 jail deaths from 2008 as other/unknown. 2009 data collection: Prior to the 2009 DCRP collection, BJS reviewed the data collection instrument, data submission procedures, and assessed the communications with DCRP respondents with the goal to reduce burden on respondents. This resulted in modifications to the survey instrument to facilitate the online data collection 32 Prison and Jail Deaths in Custody, 2000-2009 - Statistical Tables U.S. Department of Justice Office of Justice Programs Bureau of Justice Statistics Washington, DC 20531 NCJ236219 PRESORTED STANDARD POSTAGE & FEES PAID DOJ/BJS Permit No. G-91 Official Business Penalty for Private Use $300 Office of Justice Programs • Innovation • Partnerships • Safer Neighborhoods • www.ojp.gov The Bureau of Justice Statistics is the statistical agency of the U.S. Department of Justice. James P. Lynch is director. These Statistical Tables were prepared and verified by Margaret E. Noonan and E. Ann Carson. Morgan Young edited the report, Morgan Young and Barbara Quinn produced the report, and Jayne Robinson prepared the report for final printing under the supervision of Doris J. James. December 2011, NCJ 236219 The full text of each report is available in PDF and ASCII formats on the BJS website at www.bjs.gov. Tables are also available in PDF and CSV formats. Related datasets are made available on the National Archive of Criminal Justice Data website at http://www.icpsr.umich.edu/icpsrweb/NACJD/index.jsp.