
Sign up to save your podcasts
Or
Starting this spring, many states began releasing some inmates from prisons and jails to try to reduce the spread of COVID-19. But a huge number of incarcerated people are mentally ill or addicted to drugs, or sometimes both. When those people are released, they may lose their only consistent access to treatment. Marianne McCune, a reporter for WNYC, spent weeks following a psychiatrist and a social worker as they tried to locate and then help some recently released patients at a time of uncertainty and chaos.
This is a collaboration between The New Yorker Radio Hour and WNYC’s “The United States of Anxiety.”
4.2
54965,496 ratings
Starting this spring, many states began releasing some inmates from prisons and jails to try to reduce the spread of COVID-19. But a huge number of incarcerated people are mentally ill or addicted to drugs, or sometimes both. When those people are released, they may lose their only consistent access to treatment. Marianne McCune, a reporter for WNYC, spent weeks following a psychiatrist and a social worker as they tried to locate and then help some recently released patients at a time of uncertainty and chaos.
This is a collaboration between The New Yorker Radio Hour and WNYC’s “The United States of Anxiety.”
9,105 Listeners
3,853 Listeners
90,618 Listeners
38,173 Listeners
3,314 Listeners
3,923 Listeners
501 Listeners
2,094 Listeners
27,515 Listeners
86,508 Listeners
111,438 Listeners
2,309 Listeners
6,747 Listeners
15,201 Listeners
1,447 Listeners
578 Listeners
429 Listeners