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Journal Article

Citation

Snow L, Paton J, Oram C, Teers R. Br. J. Forensic Pract. 2002; 4(4): 3-17.

Copyright

(Copyright © 2002, Emerald Group Publishing)

DOI

10.1108/14636646200200022

PMID

unavailable

Abstract

This paper summarises the findings of an unpublished Prison Service report into self-inflicted deaths in prisons in England and Wales over the period 1990-2001. The key findings are that the number and rate of deaths in prisons has increased during the period examined. The majority of deaths are among men, although there has been a recent increase in the number of women who have died over and above any increase in their proportion in the prison population. Women are likely to be younger than men when they die. There is a statistically significant association between increased rates of throughput in local prisons and an increase in the rate of self-inflicted deaths. Deaths are most likely to occur soon after prisoners have been received into custody. Few prisoners who die have been identified as at increased risk of suicide. There is some evidence that the period immediately following closure of an F2052SH is a high-risk period. Most prisoners who die are in single cells. Those who die in shared cells are usually alone at the time of death. The findings support the direction of the current Safer Custody strategy: in particular the focus on local prisons, on improved vigilance and care in the early days of custody and on providing improved facilities and care in health care centres and segregation units. © 2002, MCB UP Limited


Language: en

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