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November 14, 2005: Prisons Failing on HIV & Hepatitis C
Prisons provide inconsistent and often sub-standard healthcare
despite high levels of HIV and hepatitis among prisoners, according to a report
launched today by the
Prison Reform Trust (PRT) and the National
AIDS Trust (NAT).
A survey conducted by NAT and PRT among prison healthcare managers across the
UK, found that a third of prisons surveyed had no HIV policy, one in five had no
hepatitis C policy and well over half had no sexual health policy. The report
found that some prisoners thought that HIV-positive prisoners would be subject
to bullying and discrimination if their status were known. Many prisoners do not
have appropriate access to condoms, disinfecting tablets, clean needles or
healthcare information.
April 2006 is the completion date for the transfer of responsibility of
prisoners’ healthcare to the NHS, who have pledged to provide an equivalent
standard of healthcare as that in the community. Yet while there is some
evidence of good practice, standards are inconsistent and many prisons could do
more to protect prisoners from blood borne viruses.
9% of men and 11% of women in prison have hepatitis C (20 times higher than the
rate of 0.4% in the general public). The HIV rate in prison for men is 15 times
higher than the rate outside at 0.3 per cent
Ruth Runciman, Chair of the National AIDS Trust and Deputy Chair of the Prison
Reform Trust said:
"Overcrowding and the constant movement of prisoners between
establishments create particularly adverse conditions in our prisons for
curbing the spread of HIV and hepatitis and there is an urgent need to develop
policy and practice to protect individual and public health."
Prison Reform Trust director Juliet Lyon said:
“Courts sentence people to custody not to inadequate
healthcare. The prison population is marked by poor health. It is time the NHS
developed good, well resourced policy and practice to tackle blood-borne
disease in prison. Anything else would amount to double punishment and lead to
public health risk.”
Deborah Jack, chief Executive of the National AIDS trust, said
“Good prison health is essential for good public health. The
transfer of prison health to the NHS is a vital opportunity for the government
to reduce HIV and hepatitis C transmission in prisons and ensure prisoners
have an equal standard of healthcare to that provided to members of the
public. These failings need to be addressed as a matter of urgency.”
The report is based on a survey of prison healthcare managers
conducted jointly by PRT and NAT in England and Wales, and by the NAT in
Scotland and Northern Ireland. The main recommendations of the report are:
- Treatment, care and support services should be equivalent
to those provided in the community.
- Across the UK, prison services need to conduct regular
anonymous blood tests to establish the levels of HIV and hepatitis C
infection.
- A national framework for prevention, treatment, care and
support followed up by a policy that enacts it in every single prison.
- Harm minimisation should be practised in prisons as it is
in the community. Lower risk behaviour should be promoted to prisoners.
Methadone programmes, disinfecting tablets and needle exchange should be
included.
- Male and female condoms should be available, free of
charge, in such a way that prisoners can obtain them without asking.
- Prisoners must have confidence that testing is
confidential and that they will be completely protected against
discrimination.
- All uniformed and healthcare staff need training on
reducing stigma and discrimination in relation to sexual orientation, HIV
status and hepatitis C status.
The Prison Reform Trust notes that these recommendations are
the more urgent because they are not new. They reinforce, in large part, those
made by bodies such as the AIDS Advisory Committee (1995), the European Health
in Prison Project (2001), the All Party Parliamentary Group on AIDS (2001) and
the National AIDS and Prison Forum (2002).
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