Pathways through the criminal justice system for prisoners with acute and serious mental illness

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Abstract

Purpose

To evaluate pathways through the criminal justice system for 63 prisoners under the care of prison mental health services.

Results

A small number (3%) were acutely mentally ill at prison reception, which may reflect the successful operation of liaison and diversion services at earlier stages in the pathway. However, a third (33%) went onto display acute symptoms at later stages. Cases displaying suicide risk at arrest, with a history of in-patient care, were at increased risk of acute deterioration in the first weeks of imprisonment, with a general absence of health assessments for these cases prior to their imprisonment. Inconsistencies in the transfer of mental health information to health files may result in at-risk cases being overlooked, and a lack of standardisation at the court stage results in difficulties determining onward service provision and outcomes.

Conclusions

Greater consistency in access to pre-prison health services in the criminal justice system is needed, especially for those with preexisting vulnerabilities, and it may have a role in preventing subsequent deterioration. A single system for health information flow across the whole pathway would be beneficial.
Original languageEnglish
Pages (from-to)162-168
JournalJournal Of Forensic And Legal Medicine
Volume44
Early online date24 Oct 2016
DOIs
Publication statusPublished - Nov 2016

Keywords

  • Criminal justice
  • Pathway
  • Mental illness
  • Police
  • Court
  • Prison

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