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The Five Nations model for prison health surveillance: lessons from practice across the UK and Republic of Ireland

The Five Nations model for prison health surveillance: lessons from practice across the UK and Republic of Ireland
The Five Nations model for prison health surveillance: lessons from practice across the UK and Republic of Ireland

Background: prison populations experience an increased burden of physical, mental and social health needs compared to the community, further impacted by the prison environment. Surveillance systems to monitor health and well-being trends in prisons are lacking, presenting a challenge to services planners, and policy makers who often lack evidence to inform decisions.

Method: the Five Nations Health and Justice Collaboration, a body of experts on prison health across the UK and Republic of Ireland (ROI), met to share and discuss challenges and opportunities to developing robust prison health surveillance systems that could inform local provision, guide national policy and enable cross-border comparisons.

Results: challenges to robust prison health surveillance systems were shared across the UK and ROI. Methods of surveillance differed across nations and included performance indicators and outcome measures as part of local or national programs. All nations had strong public health infectious disease notification systems.

Conclusions: the Five Nations Health and Justice Collaboration is proposing a new model for prison health surveillance, based on established guidelines for public health surveillance but with additional features that recognize the uniqueness of the prison environment and need for a whole prison approach, built on collaboration and sharing of data between health and justice sectors.

Administrative Personnel, Humans, Ireland/epidemiology, Prisoners, Prisons, United Kingdom/epidemiology
1741-3842
e561-e572
Perrett, S.
7213c6f8-9302-4df9-bef9-7821f8be4083
Plugge, E.
b64d2086-6cf2-4fae-98bf-6aafa3115b35
Conaglen, P.
4a129b6b-6e0f-48b9-98ea-2c1d6a84ea7c
O'Moore, E.
735da033-c085-4506-8b9c-3d46168ec324
Sturup-Toft, S.
10a29070-a15e-4532-960b-975541901cc1
Perrett, S.
7213c6f8-9302-4df9-bef9-7821f8be4083
Plugge, E.
b64d2086-6cf2-4fae-98bf-6aafa3115b35
Conaglen, P.
4a129b6b-6e0f-48b9-98ea-2c1d6a84ea7c
O'Moore, E.
735da033-c085-4506-8b9c-3d46168ec324
Sturup-Toft, S.
10a29070-a15e-4532-960b-975541901cc1

Perrett, S., Plugge, E., Conaglen, P., O'Moore, E. and Sturup-Toft, S. (2020) The Five Nations model for prison health surveillance: lessons from practice across the UK and Republic of Ireland. Journal of Public Health, 42 (4), e561-e572. (doi:10.1093/pubmed/fdz122).

Record type: Article

Abstract

Background: prison populations experience an increased burden of physical, mental and social health needs compared to the community, further impacted by the prison environment. Surveillance systems to monitor health and well-being trends in prisons are lacking, presenting a challenge to services planners, and policy makers who often lack evidence to inform decisions.

Method: the Five Nations Health and Justice Collaboration, a body of experts on prison health across the UK and Republic of Ireland (ROI), met to share and discuss challenges and opportunities to developing robust prison health surveillance systems that could inform local provision, guide national policy and enable cross-border comparisons.

Results: challenges to robust prison health surveillance systems were shared across the UK and ROI. Methods of surveillance differed across nations and included performance indicators and outcome measures as part of local or national programs. All nations had strong public health infectious disease notification systems.

Conclusions: the Five Nations Health and Justice Collaboration is proposing a new model for prison health surveillance, based on established guidelines for public health surveillance but with additional features that recognize the uniqueness of the prison environment and need for a whole prison approach, built on collaboration and sharing of data between health and justice sectors.

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More information

Accepted/In Press date: 23 August 2019
e-pub ahead of print date: 15 November 2020
Published date: December 2020
Keywords: Administrative Personnel, Humans, Ireland/epidemiology, Prisoners, Prisons, United Kingdom/epidemiology

Identifiers

Local EPrints ID: 485255
URI: http://eprints.soton.ac.uk/id/eprint/485255
ISSN: 1741-3842
PURE UUID: 0f03bcbb-65a3-4d05-a50f-7fd98cf87cf5
ORCID for E. Plugge: ORCID iD orcid.org/0000-0002-8359-0071

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

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Contributors

Author: S. Perrett
Author: E. Plugge ORCID iD
Author: P. Conaglen
Author: E. O'Moore
Author: S. Sturup-Toft

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