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Looking behind the bars: emerging health issues for people in prison

Looking behind the bars: emerging health issues for people in prison
Looking behind the bars: emerging health issues for people in prison

Introduction: there are more than 10 million people imprisoned worldwide. These individuals experience a higher burden of communicable and non-communicable disease, mental health and substance misuse problems than the general population and often come from marginalized and underserved groups in the community. Prisons offer an important opportunity for tackling health problems in a way that can deliver benefits to the individual and to the community. This paper focuses specifically on emerging health issues for prisons across the world.

Sources of data: this paper uses sources of international data from published systematic reviews and research studies, the Ministry of Justice for England and Wales, the Prisons and Probations Ombudsmen Review and other United Kingdom government briefing papers.

Areas of agreement: deaths in custody are a key concern for the justice system as well as the health system.

Areas of controversy: suicide is the leading cause of mortality in prisons worldwide but non-communicable diseases, such as cardiovascular disease, are increasing in importance in high-income countries and are now the leading cause of mortality in prisons in England and Wales.

Growing points: the prison population is ageing in most high-income countries. Older people in prison typically have multiple and complex medical and social care needs including reduced mobility and personal care needs as well as poor health.

Areas timely for developing research: further research is needed to understand the complex relationship between sentencing patterns, the ageing prison population and deaths in custody; to model its impact on prisons and healthcare provision in the future and to determine effective and cost-effective models of care. Research into the health of prisoners is important in improving the health of prisoners but there is considerable variation in quantity and quality between countries. Recent innovations seek to address this disparity and facilitate the sharing of good practice.

Delivery of Health Care/methods, Global Health, Health Status Disparities, Humans, Needs Assessment, Prisoners, Prisons, United Kingdom
0007-1420
15-23
Stürup-Toft, S.
bcb6849c-224c-4910-85d7-4b02141c6a3f
O'Moore, E.J.
af98ff94-03fd-450e-a4c0-552767283b90
Plugge, E.H.
b64d2086-6cf2-4fae-98bf-6aafa3115b35
Stürup-Toft, S.
bcb6849c-224c-4910-85d7-4b02141c6a3f
O'Moore, E.J.
af98ff94-03fd-450e-a4c0-552767283b90
Plugge, E.H.
b64d2086-6cf2-4fae-98bf-6aafa3115b35

Stürup-Toft, S., O'Moore, E.J. and Plugge, E.H. (2018) Looking behind the bars: emerging health issues for people in prison. British Medical Bulletin, 125 (1), 15-23. (doi:10.1093/bmb/ldx052).

Record type: Review

Abstract

Introduction: there are more than 10 million people imprisoned worldwide. These individuals experience a higher burden of communicable and non-communicable disease, mental health and substance misuse problems than the general population and often come from marginalized and underserved groups in the community. Prisons offer an important opportunity for tackling health problems in a way that can deliver benefits to the individual and to the community. This paper focuses specifically on emerging health issues for prisons across the world.

Sources of data: this paper uses sources of international data from published systematic reviews and research studies, the Ministry of Justice for England and Wales, the Prisons and Probations Ombudsmen Review and other United Kingdom government briefing papers.

Areas of agreement: deaths in custody are a key concern for the justice system as well as the health system.

Areas of controversy: suicide is the leading cause of mortality in prisons worldwide but non-communicable diseases, such as cardiovascular disease, are increasing in importance in high-income countries and are now the leading cause of mortality in prisons in England and Wales.

Growing points: the prison population is ageing in most high-income countries. Older people in prison typically have multiple and complex medical and social care needs including reduced mobility and personal care needs as well as poor health.

Areas timely for developing research: further research is needed to understand the complex relationship between sentencing patterns, the ageing prison population and deaths in custody; to model its impact on prisons and healthcare provision in the future and to determine effective and cost-effective models of care. Research into the health of prisoners is important in improving the health of prisoners but there is considerable variation in quantity and quality between countries. Recent innovations seek to address this disparity and facilitate the sharing of good practice.

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More information

Accepted/In Press date: 16 January 2018
e-pub ahead of print date: 31 January 2018
Published date: March 2018
Keywords: Delivery of Health Care/methods, Global Health, Health Status Disparities, Humans, Needs Assessment, Prisoners, Prisons, United Kingdom

Identifiers

Local EPrints ID: 485254
URI: http://eprints.soton.ac.uk/id/eprint/485254
ISSN: 0007-1420
PURE UUID: c0d17902-4115-4aff-9dca-cc5c31b8dc81
ORCID for E.H. Plugge: ORCID iD orcid.org/0000-0002-8359-0071

Catalogue record

Date deposited: 01 Dec 2023 17:49
Last modified: 18 Mar 2024 03:57

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Contributors

Author: S. Stürup-Toft
Author: E.J. O'Moore
Author: E.H. Plugge ORCID iD

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