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November 23, 2005: Jailing the Mentally Ill The report is a comprehensive review of how mentally ill offenders reach prison and are treated there. It shows that prisons are ill-suited for managing mental illness, staff have profound difficulties coping with the complex needs of mentally ill offenders and the mental health of many deteriorates as a result of the stressful conditions in prison. It considers the needs of specific groups, including people who are deaf, ageing or from a minority ethnic background. There is a marked failure to address their particular needs for mental healthcare as these offenders may also face exclusion, discrimination, misdiagnosis and neglect in prison. The report is published at a time when the NHS is close to taking full responsibility for healthcare in all public prisons in England and Wales. Despite Department of Health commitments, people in prison often receive treatment which fails to meet anything like an equivalent standard to the quality of healthcare outside. In our overcrowded, under-resourced jails, the gap between prison and community health service is widening. Equivalence of mental healthcare is supported by heroic efforts by health staff, but is unattainable in present conditions because of the high psychiatric morbidity of prisoners, the low level of existing services in prison, the pressure of overcrowding, separation from families and the loss of continuity of care. According to PRT director Juliet Lyon:
The report calls for action:
The PRT also notes that 20% of men entering custody say
they have previously attempted suicide. According to the Government’s
Social Exclusion Unit, more
than 50 prisoners commit suicide shortly after release each year. A significant
number of prisoners suffer from a psychotic disorder. Seven per cent of male
sentenced prisoners have a psychotic disorder; 14 times the level in the general
population. A high proportion of prisoners have been treated in psychiatric
hospitals - 20% of male and sentenced prisoners have previously been admitted
for in-patient psychiatric care. Research also suggests that prisoners are twice
as likely to be refused treatment for mental health problems inside prison than
outside. |
November 28, 2008: Call To End Orange Clothes For Community Payback November 25, 2008: Legislation Protects Victims Of Forced Marriage November 24, 2008: Tasers For Police November 11, 2008: Independent Review Alleges Prison Service Incompetence October 17, 2008: Sanctions For Reckless Traders, Says Napo October 15, 2008: Jobs Axed in Probation, Prisons, And Courts October 3, 2008: IPCC On Double Fatal Shooting October 2, 2008: Met Commissioner Sir Ian Blair Resigns October 1, 2008: New Met Police e-crime Unit September 25, 2008: ID Cards Update September 22, 2008: New Prostitution Rules Supporting Trafficked Women September 19, 2008: Mandatory Polygraph Tests for Sex Offenders September 12, 2008: Prison Transfer With Vietnam Agreed September 4, 2008: Reoffending Rates: New Figures September 1, 2008: Tougher Community Work For Offenders August 26, 2008. Summary Justice Widening Criminal Justice Net August 21, 2008: Tightening Controls For Sex Offenders July 15, 2008: Explaining The Rise In Prison Numbers
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