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1.
Int J Prison Health ; 15(3): 262-272, 2019 08 29.
Article in English | MEDLINE | ID: mdl-31329035

ABSTRACT

PURPOSE: The purpose of this paper is to explore the association between the quality of prison life and mental health among prisoners and the occurrence of violence. DESIGN/METHODOLOGY/APPROACH: In total, 203 prisoners from Dubrava Correctional Center in Kosovo participated. Data on background characteristics of the prisoners, quality of prison life, mental health symptoms and exposure to physical, psychological and sexual violence were collected through interviewer-administered questionnaires. Data were analyzed using general linear models (GLM) and manual backwards model search with step-wise exclusion. FINDINGS: The GLM analysis showed a significant negative association between anxiety symptom load (-1.4), physical violence (-1.5) and psychological violence (-1.9), and quality of prison life. Furthermore, it appeared that prisoners rating of quality of life (QoL) increased with time among prisoners not exposed to violence, while this was not seen among prisoners exposed to violence. Finally, there was an inverse association between the dimensions of respect, fairness, humanity and good staff/prisoner relations, and the proportion of prisoners exposed to violence. ORIGINALITY/VALUE: An environment with higher levels of respect, fairness, humanity and good relations between staff and prisoners was associated with lower levels of violence. Hence, a prison that focuses on promoting QoL and good mental health among prisoners will show lower levels of violence, thereby making the prison a more tolerable place for the prisoners and a better working environment for prison staff.


Subject(s)
Mental Health/statistics & numerical data , Prisoners/psychology , Prisons , Quality of Life/psychology , Violence/statistics & numerical data , Adult , Anxiety/epidemiology , Environment , Humans , Kosovo/epidemiology , Psychological Trauma/epidemiology
2.
Br J Sociol ; 69(4): 1194-1219, 2018 Dec.
Article in English | MEDLINE | ID: mdl-28986981

ABSTRACT

In this paper, we revisit King and McDermott's 1990 article on the social construction of 'control problem' prisoners and their management in high security prisons, in the light of our recent research on the location and building of trust in contemporary high security prisons. We examine how religious and race identities are now deeply implicated in the construction of risk, and we describe the procedures for and some of the consequences of managing the new risks of radicalization and extremist violence in prison. The analysis is based on observations and interviews with staff and prisoners in two main and two supplementary maximum-security prisons in England and Wales.


Subject(s)
Interpersonal Relations , Prisoners/psychology , Racism/psychology , Social Stigma , Violence/psychology , Adult , Black People , England , Humans , Islam , Male , Prejudice , Prisons , Racial Groups , Religion , Risk , Social Environment , Terrorism/psychology , Wales
3.
J Correct Health Care ; 23(1): 20-31, 2017 Jan.
Article in English | MEDLINE | ID: mdl-28100149

ABSTRACT

There are many ways that life can end in prison. This article takes suicides, murder, and the whole life sentence as three forms of unnatural death that illustrate important features of the prison experience and that take on a special meaning in this environment. These forms of death in custody challenge the "legitimate penological purposes of imprisonment." Reflections on the importance of hope and dignity in prison are informed by this account.


Subject(s)
Cause of Death , Prisoners/statistics & numerical data , Prisons , Homicide , Humans , Suicide
4.
Int J Offender Ther Comp Criminol ; 61(6): 689-710, 2017 May.
Article in English | MEDLINE | ID: mdl-26320031

ABSTRACT

This article presents results from a systematic review and two meta-analyses that examine whether prison yoga and meditation programs are significantly related to increased psychological well-being and improvements in the behavioural functioning of prisoners. Comprehensive searches of the empirical literature were conducted up to December 2014. Participants who completed yoga or meditation program in prison experienced a small increase in their psychological well-being (Cohen's d = 0.46, 95% confidence interval [CI] = [0.39, 0.54]) and a small improvement in their behavioural functioning (Cohen's d = 0.30, 95% CI = [0.20, 0.40]). Moderator analyses suggested that there was a significant difference in effect sizes for programs of longer duration and less intensity, compared with those that were shorter and more intensive, for psychological well-being. Programs of longer duration had a slightly larger positive effect on behavioural functioning ( d = 0.424), compared with more intensive programs ( d = 0.418). Overall, the evidence suggests that yoga and meditation have favourable effects on prisoners.


Subject(s)
Meditation/methods , Meditation/psychology , Mindfulness/organization & administration , Prisoners/psychology , Prisons , Yoga/psychology , Adaptation, Psychological , Humans , Treatment Outcome
5.
Int J Drug Policy ; 29: 49-56, 2016 Mar.
Article in English | MEDLINE | ID: mdl-26809934

ABSTRACT

BACKGROUND: In recent years, an abstinence-focused, 'recovery' agenda has emerged in UK drug policy, largely in response to the perception that many opioid users had been 'parked indefinitely' on opioid substitution therapy (OST). The introduction of ten pilot 'Drug Recovery Wings' (DRWs) in 2011 represents the application of this recovery agenda to prisons. This paper describes the DRWs' operational models, the place of opiate dependent prisoners within them, and the challenges of delivering 'recovery' in prison. METHODS: In 2013, the implementation and operational models of all ten pilot DRWs were rapidly assessed. Up to three days were spent in each DRW, undertaking semi-structured interviews with a sample of 94 DRW staff and 102 DRW residents. Interviews were fully transcribed, and coded using grounded theory. Findings from the nine adult prisons are presented here. RESULTS: Four types of DRW were identified, distinguished by their size and selection criteria. Strikingly, no mid- or large-sized units regularly supported OST recipients through detoxification. Type A were large units whose residents were mostly on OST with long criminal records and few social or personal resources. Detoxification was rare, and medication reduction slow. Type B's mid-sized DRW was developed as a psychosocial support service for OST clients seeking detoxification. However, staff struggled to find such prisoners, and detoxification again proved rare. Type C DRWs focused on abstinence from all drugs, including OST. Though OST clients were not intentionally excluded, very few applied to these wings. Only Type D DRWs, offering intensive treatment on very small wings, regularly recruited OST recipients into abstinence-focused interventions. CONCLUSION: Prison units wishing to support OST recipients in making greater progress towards abstinence may need to be small, intensive and take a stepped approach based on preparatory motivational work and extensive preparation for release. However, concerns about post-release deaths will remain.


Subject(s)
Attitude of Health Personnel , Drug Users/psychology , Health Services Accessibility/organization & administration , Prisoners/psychology , Adult , Female , Heroin Dependence/drug therapy , Heroin Dependence/therapy , Humans , Male , Opiate Substitution Treatment/methods , Prisons/organization & administration , United Kingdom
6.
Br J Sociol ; 65(3): 387-410, 2014 Sep.
Article in English | MEDLINE | ID: mdl-25251137

ABSTRACT

Since King and McDermott (1995), following Downes (1988), defined the psychological oppressiveness of incarceration in terms of 'weight', little has been written about the 'weight of imprisonment'. None the less, it is generally assumed that prisons that are 'light' are preferable to those that are 'heavy' - in part because of an assumption among many penologists that power, and its application, is dangerous and antagonistic. This article does not dispute that 'heavy' prisons are undesirable. Its argument is that there can also be dangers if prisons are excessively light. Many of these dangers are linked to the under-use of power. The tone and quality of prison life depends on the combined effects of institutional weight with the 'absence' or 'presence' of staff power. Drawing on prisoners' descriptions of their experiences in public and private sector prisons, and their assessments of important aspects of their quality of life, the article outlines what these concepts mean in practice. The authors develop a four-quadrant framework for conceptualizeng penal legitimacy and the experience of penal authority.


Subject(s)
Prisoners/psychology , Humans , Models, Psychological , Power, Psychological , Prisons/organization & administration , Private Sector , Public Sector , Quality of Life
7.
Crisis ; 28(3): 113-21, 2007.
Article in English | MEDLINE | ID: mdl-17992824

ABSTRACT

In 2000 the Department of Mental Health of the World Health Organization (WHO) published a guide named Preventing Suicide. A Resource for Prison Officers as part of the WHO worldwide initiative for the prevention of suicide. In 2007 there are new epidemiological data on prison suicide, a more detailed discussion of risk factors accounting for the generally higher rate of suicide in correctional settings in comparison to the general population, and several strategies for developing screening instruments. As a first step, this paper presents an update of the WHO guide by the Task Force on Suicide in Prisons, created by the International Association for Suicide Prevention. A second paper, by the same Task Force, will present some international comparisons of suicide prevention services in correctional facilities.


Subject(s)
International Cooperation , Prisons , Suicide Prevention , Humans , Prisoners/psychology , Suicide, Attempted/prevention & control
8.
Crisis ; 28(3): 122-30, 2007.
Article in English | MEDLINE | ID: mdl-17992825

ABSTRACT

The International Association for Suicide Prevention created a Task Force on Suicide in Prisons to better disseminate the information in this domain. One of its objectives was to summarize suicide-prevention activities in the prison systems. This study of the Task Force uncovered many differences between countries, although mental health professionals remain central in all suicide prevention activities. Inmate peer-support and correctional officers also play critical roles in suicide prevention but there is great variation in the involvement of outside community workers. These differences could be explained by the availability of resources, by the structure of the correctional and community services, but mainly by the different paradigms about suicide prevention. While there is a common and traditional paradigm that suicide prevention services are mainly offered to individuals by mental health services, correctional systems differ in the way they include (or not) other partners of suicide prevention: correctional officers, other employees, peer inmates, chaplains/priests, and community workers. Circumstances, history, and national cultures may explain such diversity but they might also depend on the basic way we think about suicide prevention at both individual and environmental levels.


Subject(s)
International Cooperation , Prisons , Suicide Prevention , Australia , Austria , Canada , Germany , Humans , Italy , Netherlands , United Kingdom , United States
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