What should
be done following the
horrific report last week about the baby who died at Bronzefield Prison two
years ago? There’s a lot to be said for restricting much more tightly, if not banning outright, the use of imprisonment for pregnant women; and for strengthening
the criteria which must be met before young adults are remanded to custody –
something I argued for in a report for
the T2A Alliance earlier this year, but which hasn’t so far led to concrete
proposals for change – in contrast to
welcome changes to remand arrangements for children in the Police,
Crime Sentencing and Courts Bill.
The
Action Plan published alongside the PPO report addresses many of
the specific failings which led to the tragedy, but there’s a case for a more
fundamental look at the adequacy of healthcare provided in prison, for women, men
and children. Sue McAllister’s conclusion
that the care offered to the mother of the baby who died was “not equivalent to
that she could have expected in the community” seems something of an
understatement.
The standard
of healthcare varies widely in prisons – the four most recent Independent
Monitoring Board Annual Reports have
suggested it’s as good if not better than that provided in the community at HMP
Styal, but not at HMP Hull,
while medicine management was “totally unacceptable” at Stafford
and problematic at Pentonville.
During the
pandemic, many prison health care services were reduced to emergency access
only and the Prison Inspectorate reported that the physical
health of prisoners has deteriorated in lockdown. The House of Commons
Justice Committee is currently in the middle of inquiries into mental
health in prisons and women in
prison, but there’s surely a case for a post pandemic investigation of how
the physical health care needs of prisoners are being met and arrangements could
be improved.
It’s true that three years ago the House of Commons Health
and Social Care Committee looked at Prison
Health and recommended the Government make a “serious attempt to tackle the
unacceptable health inequalities present in the current prison healthcare
system.” But progress on its recommendations seems to have been limited.
Very surprisingly, in the light of what happened a year later,
the report commended the “provision of counselling and support for women in
crisis pregnancy and around the loss of a baby or child” at HMP Bronzefield as
a best practice. While as this shows, things
can go wrong quickly and disastrously in prisons, it’s the Committee’s
recommendations on monitoring and inspection that are none the less among the
most significant.
Prison healthcare in England is jointly inspected by HM
Inspectorate of Prisons (HMIP) and the Care Quality Commission (CQC), the independent
regulator of health and adult social care. The Health Committee argued that greater
prominence should be given to CQC’s judgements in inspection reports which
should provide a distinct rating about health outcomes rather than merely contribute
to a wider assessment of whether prisoners are treated with respect for their
human dignity.
They also recommended that CQC should conduct a review of the
commissioning of health and social care in a number of prisons and report in
2019; and be given legal powers of entry into prisons. Apparently CQC must
notify a prison in advance of any visit which makes something of a mockery of
the notion of an unannounced inspection.
I may have missed something, but I’m not sure what if any of these proposals
have been taken on board. HMIP and CQC operate to a memorandum
of understanding from 2016 and CQC regulate according to a
handbook from 2015. HMIP reports don’t yet seem to include a distinct
health rating. The review of commissioning
does not seem to have taken place or if it has, it’s not published. It would for
example be useful to have an expert view on the model in place at Bronzefield where
Sodexo directly employs nurses and healthcare assistants and has a corporate
contract to employ GPs from Cimarron UK which describes itself as a locum agency.
If there has been inaction, it may be perfectly well explained
by the COVID crisis. But as the pandemic hopefully wanes, there is a case for
revisiting the 2018 report. One of its key recommendations was that CQC should
assess the range of services provided in prisons, including physical health and
the prison environment, against the five criteria they apply in other settings-
whether they are safe, effective, caring, responsive and well-led.
Services for pregnant women should be top of that list but
there is much else to be looked into. There is a case for an assessment to be made
under the aegis of a Parliamentary Committee or an independent Task Force set up
for the purpose.