Pursuing excellent health and care for people in contact with the UK criminal justice system

Category: News

  • WHO mental health in detention conference

    The World Health Organisation (WHO) International Conference: Mental health and wellbeing in detention centres: prison health is public health is being held in Amsterdam 18-19 April 2024.

    There will be livestream plenary sessions from the conference, to allow for as many people as possible to join the event. Follow the stream using the link below, and feel free to share the link with other stakeholders to benefit from this important gathering. 

    Day I: Thursday, April 18

    • 09:00 – 09:30: Official opening
    • 09:30 – 09:50: Keynote I | Criminal justice and mental health: international and Dutch perspective by Michiel van der Wolf
    • 09:50 – 10:10: Keynote II | Mental health and human rights in detention centres by Elena Kountouri Tapiero
    • 10:10 – 10:30: Keynote III | Meaningful engagement of people with lived experience by Piet Broenland
    • 10:30 – 11:00: Coffee & tea break
    • 11:00 – 12:00: Plenary theme session I: Epidemiology and risk factors of mental health and wellbeing in detention centres (Elena Leclerc, Daniel Lopez Acuna, Filipa Alves da Costa and Liesbeth Vandam) 
    • 12:00 – 16:45: No livestream
    • 16:45 – 17:15: Summary report & closing remarks

    Day 2: Friday, April 19

    • 09:00 – 10:00: Effective strategies in health promotion and disease prevention for mental health and substance abuse in detention centres (Thomas Martinelli, Anja Busse, Éamonn O’Moore and Maha Aon)
    • 10:00 – 10:30: Coffee & tea break
    • 10:30 – 11:30: Effective treatment and rehabilitation strategies in mental health and substance abuse in detention centres (Heino Stöver, Ledia Lazeri, Kate Davies and Joost Walraven)
    • 12:00 – 15:25: No livestream
    • 15:25 – 16:00: Summary report, poster award & closing remarks

  • IAPDC Workplan 2024/25

    Workstreams include: 

    • Working collaboratively to improve investigations into, and data on, deaths under the Mental Health Act.
    • Responding to the prison capacity crisis which has seen diminished access to purposeful activity, time out of cell, and key work.
    • Building on the key strategic recommendations of the Angiolini review into deaths and serious incidents in police custody.
    • Focusing on improvements to the operation of key safeguards in the immigration detention estate, in particular Rules 34 and 35, to improve the protective mechanisms for those who are most vulnerable.
  • New NHSE Measles Guidance

    The updated guidance for health professionals published on 20/03/24 covers:

    • Clinical diagnosis of measles and differential diagnosis
    • Management of suspected or confirmed measles
    • All ages across all healthcare settings

  • New Standards for Managing Sexual Health in Prisons

    The British Association for Sexual Health and HIV (BASHH) publishes its new Standards for the Management of Sexual Health in UK Prisons.

    “The Standards for the Management of Sexual Health in UK Prisons have been created to promote and support the equity of sexual healthcare for those in UK prisons. Those in prison should have rapid access to sexual health care; appropriate assessment of their sexual health needs with the most appropriate tests and timely results; their confidentiality should be maintained; they should receive good quality services from adequately trained staff; and where needed, be referred on to other specialities. To fully understand the barriers faced and the needs of those affected, people in prison need to be included in the development of sexual healthcare services in prisons.

    The standards will support commissioners, healthcare providers and those in prison to ensure sexual health care provision in prison settings mirrors that of the community. Additional measures are outlined in the standards to promote equity of care, such as opt-out screening for blood borne viruses on arrival and further discussion at 14 days. Screening on arrival at each secure unit will help overcome the rapid turnover and sometimes frequent movement of those in prison.”

    — Forward, Standards for the Management of Sexual Health in UK Prisons, BASHH

  • 10th Health & Justice Summit – Winning Poster Submission

    We are thrilled to announce that the winning poster submission from the 10th Health and Justice Summit (2023) was Joelle Booth’s “Co-producing a Film Showcasing the Dental Experiences of Community Returners (Ex-offenders)” poster.

    Joelle and colleagues based their poster on the fantastic work they had done to co-produce a film that would showcase the dental experiences of community returners, in a bid to stimulate conversation, change perceptions and inform oral health research priorities.

    Congratulations to Joelle and all the other contributors to this project and poster.