Javascript must be enabled to continue!
Workshop: Better prison health for better public health
View through CrossRef
Abstract
According to the latest data, in 2018 about 590,000 people were held in prison on any given day in the EU, and more than double in the entire region. People in prison face multiple and complex health care issues, including a higher prevalence of communicable diseases than the general population. These are likely to be the result of a combination of overlapping, and sometimes interlinked, risk factors for infection, ill-health, and incarceration, such as problem drug use. Incarceration may facilitate the offer of quality health care services to people who are otherwise hard to reach and provide an occasion to target socially deprived groups who often have low level of healthcare access when in the community. Delivering health protection and harm reduction programmes in prisons not only benefits the prison population but also has the potential to reduce the risk of transmission of some infectious diseases in the community, intervening earlier in the natural history of disease. They are also likely also to have a knock-on effect in supporting individuals’ reintegration into community life and future health - providing a ‘community dividend’ to health interventions in prisons. Yet, such health gains may be diminished by suboptimal integration with community services. Continuity of care, or throughcare, between prison and community services is a mainstay of any health care interventions delivered in detention, especially when tackling chronic conditions (e.g. HIV, mental illnesses) or problem drug use.
The World Health Organization (WHO) has long supported the concept of prison health as an inseparable component of public health. This view is enshrined by the principle of Equivalence of Care between prison and community, endorsed by the United Nations in the Nelson Mandela Rules. During the 2019 WHO Prison Health Conference in Helsinki, it was acknowledged that prisons contribute to achieving the UN’s Sustainable Development Goals through improving health, reducing health inequalities and provide a fairer and safer society for all. However, a number of challenges hampers the successful implementation of such a concept, including the need for evidence-based decision making, inter-sectoral partnerships and adequate monitoring systems.
This workshop will provide attendees with a comprehensive overview of prison health and the relevance of a multi-sectorial public health approach to frame and address it. The workshop will be structured around three main topics: governance of prison health and current models in Europe; health issues and disease burden in the prison population; current and future perspectives for evidence-based approaches to prison health. The discussion of two case studies, problem drug use and HCV micro-elimination, will create the context for an in-depth analysis of key challenges for prison health implementation, reflecting on aspects such as health needs, equity, multidisciplinarity, continuity of care, monitoring and community dividend.
Key messages
Provide a comprehensive picture of the main challenges of prison health in Europe, the public health issues affecting the prison population and how these relate to community public health systems. Reflect on how public health systems need to incorporate prison health into their strategies for reducing inequalities and improving health outcomes of vulnerable and socially deprived populations.
Title: Workshop: Better prison health for better public health
Description:
Abstract
According to the latest data, in 2018 about 590,000 people were held in prison on any given day in the EU, and more than double in the entire region.
People in prison face multiple and complex health care issues, including a higher prevalence of communicable diseases than the general population.
These are likely to be the result of a combination of overlapping, and sometimes interlinked, risk factors for infection, ill-health, and incarceration, such as problem drug use.
Incarceration may facilitate the offer of quality health care services to people who are otherwise hard to reach and provide an occasion to target socially deprived groups who often have low level of healthcare access when in the community.
Delivering health protection and harm reduction programmes in prisons not only benefits the prison population but also has the potential to reduce the risk of transmission of some infectious diseases in the community, intervening earlier in the natural history of disease.
They are also likely also to have a knock-on effect in supporting individuals’ reintegration into community life and future health - providing a ‘community dividend’ to health interventions in prisons.
Yet, such health gains may be diminished by suboptimal integration with community services.
Continuity of care, or throughcare, between prison and community services is a mainstay of any health care interventions delivered in detention, especially when tackling chronic conditions (e.
g.
HIV, mental illnesses) or problem drug use.
The World Health Organization (WHO) has long supported the concept of prison health as an inseparable component of public health.
This view is enshrined by the principle of Equivalence of Care between prison and community, endorsed by the United Nations in the Nelson Mandela Rules.
During the 2019 WHO Prison Health Conference in Helsinki, it was acknowledged that prisons contribute to achieving the UN’s Sustainable Development Goals through improving health, reducing health inequalities and provide a fairer and safer society for all.
However, a number of challenges hampers the successful implementation of such a concept, including the need for evidence-based decision making, inter-sectoral partnerships and adequate monitoring systems.
This workshop will provide attendees with a comprehensive overview of prison health and the relevance of a multi-sectorial public health approach to frame and address it.
The workshop will be structured around three main topics: governance of prison health and current models in Europe; health issues and disease burden in the prison population; current and future perspectives for evidence-based approaches to prison health.
The discussion of two case studies, problem drug use and HCV micro-elimination, will create the context for an in-depth analysis of key challenges for prison health implementation, reflecting on aspects such as health needs, equity, multidisciplinarity, continuity of care, monitoring and community dividend.
Key messages
Provide a comprehensive picture of the main challenges of prison health in Europe, the public health issues affecting the prison population and how these relate to community public health systems.
Reflect on how public health systems need to incorporate prison health into their strategies for reducing inequalities and improving health outcomes of vulnerable and socially deprived populations.
Related Results
The Women Who Don’t Get Counted
The Women Who Don’t Get Counted
Photo by Hédi Benyounes on Unsplash
ABSTRACT
The current incarceration facilities for the growing number of women are depriving expecting mothers of adequate care cruci...
Warszawska konspiracja więzienna 1939-1944 (udział polskiego personelu)
Warszawska konspiracja więzienna 1939-1944 (udział polskiego personelu)
Taken over by the Nazi in September 1939, Polish prisons became not only the gallows of many thousands of Poles but also the site of heroic struggle against the invaders ‒ a strugg...
Piece by piece: Collaborative mosaic-making for inclusive policy development
Piece by piece: Collaborative mosaic-making for inclusive policy development
This report sets out the findings from one of four projects commissioned by Wellcome Policy Lab to pilot creative approaches to policy development. In this project, Scientia Script...
Pregnant Prisoners in Shackles
Pregnant Prisoners in Shackles
Photo by niu niu on Unsplash
ABSTRACT
Shackling prisoners has been implemented as standard procedure when transporting prisoners in labor and during childbirth. This procedure ensu...
6.M. Workshop: Models of care in prison: addressing infectious diseases during and after the pandemic in EU/EEA
6.M. Workshop: Models of care in prison: addressing infectious diseases during and after the pandemic in EU/EEA
Abstract
According to the latest data, in 2019 about 497,000 people were held in prison on any given day in the EU. However, t...
The effects of prison experience, education, and social support on inmates’ mental health in Brazil
The effects of prison experience, education, and social support on inmates’ mental health in Brazil
Purpose
This study aims to examine how prison experience, perceived social support, and education are related to mental health distress among Brazilian inmates....
The impact of COVID-19 on the mental well-being of prison officers in a developing country
The impact of COVID-19 on the mental well-being of prison officers in a developing country
Purpose
The literature on prison officers highlights the mental health effects of the COVID-19 pandemic on prison staff. However, there is limited knowledge abo...
Workshop: Transforming four walls into bridges: embracing solidarity via prison health
Workshop: Transforming four walls into bridges: embracing solidarity via prison health
Abstract
The global population has grown by 20% over the last 15 years. At the same time, the prison population has increased b...

