Suicide and Self-harm in Prison (England) 11.00 am Luciana
Berger (Liverpool, Wavertree) (Lab/Co-op) I beg to move,
That this House has considered rates of suicide and
self-harm in prisons in England. It is a privilege to serve
under your chairmanship this morning, Mr Chope. I am pleased to
have the...Request free trial
Suicide and Self-harm in Prison (England)
11.00 am
-
(Liverpool, Wavertree)
(Lab/Co-op)
I beg to move,
That this House has considered rates of suicide and
self-harm in prisons in England.
It is a privilege to serve under your chairmanship this
morning, Mr Chope. I am pleased to have the opportunity to
discuss the record levels of suicide and self-harm in our
prisons in this timely debate.
Yesterday, it was announced that prison officers planned to
strike today. The reasons they cited were:
“More and more members…being assaulted every day”
and
“the increase in self-inflicted deaths and daily security
breaches…as a result of staff shortfalls and budget cuts.”
The industrial action has been blocked by the Secretary of
State for Justice, who won an injunction in the High Court,
but the serious concerns raised by the Prison Officers
Association cannot be ignored. Yesterday, a report from the
Institute for Government declared that spending decisions
have pushed prisons “beyond breaking point”.
Our criminal justice system rests on the idea that a person
who has committed a crime should be punished if necessary
and, as a last resort, by the removal of their liberty. By
removing a criminal’s freedom, we seek to protect the
public from the criminal’s activities for the duration of
their time in prison. We also aspire to provide meaningful
opportunities for rehabilitation so that on release, the
prisoner can rejoin society as a law-abiding citizen.
What we do not do in the United Kingdom, and have not done
since 1964, is use the removal of a criminal’s life as a
punishment, yet within our modern-day prison system an
all-time record number of prisoners are paying for their
crimes with their lives. Official data published by the
Ministry of Justice on 26 January showed that 119 prisoners
died by suicide during 2016—the highest number in a
calendar year since current recording practices began in
1978.
Inquest, a charity that monitors deaths in prisons, has
reported that already there have been eight recorded
self-inflicted deaths in 2017, with a further seven deaths
awaiting classification. On average, a prisoner dies by
suicide every three days, and 12 women lost their lives
through suicide in 2016. The Minister might be tempted to
say that the increase in deaths by suicide is a reflection
of the increase in the prison population as a whole, but
that argument does not stack up when we look at the
figures. The number of deaths by suicide has doubled in
just five years, yet the size of the prison population,
currently standing at a little over 85,000, has plainly not
doubled since 2010.
The Minister might be further tempted to suggest that a
prisoner who takes their own life in prison might have done
the same on the outside, but a self-inflicted death is 8.6
times more likely in prison than in the general population,
according to the Howard League for Penal Reform.
-
(Central Suffolk and
North Ipswich) (Con)
I congratulate the hon. Lady on securing this important
debate. She has made some excellent points, to which I hope
to hear the reply later. Does she agree that a suicide in a
hospital would be a very serious issue and that a suicide
in prison should be taken no less seriously? Urgent action
is needed to reduce suicides that take place on prison
premises.
-
I thank the hon. Gentleman for his intervention and for his
commitment to the issue of mental health. Deaths in prison
should be treated no differently from those in any other
setting. Issues such as ligature points are contended with
very differently in inpatient settings and in prisons. We
could point to many things that should be treated in the
same way as in any other element of life outside prison.
The number of self-harm incidents has also reached a record
high of 37,784, which is up nearly 7,000 on the previous
year.
One group that has been uniquely failed by the prison
system is transgendered prisoners. There have been four
deaths by suicide of transgendered people while in prison
over a mere matter of months. That is from an estimated
prison population of just 85.
We know that the prevalence of mental health conditions is
much higher among the prison population. Prisoners are over
three times more likely to suffer from depression, 12 times
more likely to suffer from a personality disorder and 16
times more likely to suffer from psychosis.
For prisoners who need to be treated in a mental health
inpatient unit, departmental guidance states that transfers
under the Mental Health Act 1983 should take place within
14 days. I was appalled to learn from the answer to my
written parliamentary question that in 2015-16, 1,141
prisoners—three in four—waited longer than that two-week
window. Such ubiquitous failure would never be tolerated in
the outside world.
With regard to data on mental health in prisons, it feels
like a minefield trying to get hold of figures that give a
true representation of the scale of the problems. I cannot
help but feel that the Minister and his Department are
trying to pull the wool over our eyes. When I resubmitted
my question to get the most up-to-date figures, I was told
that, in the space of just a few months, the data are now
“not held in the requested format”,
despite the wording of my question being identical. I hope
the Minister will tell me why the collection of the data
has changed.
When I finished drafting my speech shortly before we began
this morning, the Department’s answers to four of my
named-day questions were long overdue. The answers would
have played a key part in my contribution, but,
regretfully, I cannot hold the Government to account fully
for them today. Just one example is a question I asked
about what proportion of people who died by suicide in
prisons were not on the assessment, care in custody and
teamwork pathway for people who have been identified as
being at risk. In 2015, only 35 of 89 people who died by
suicide were on the ACCT pathway, suggesting that too many
vulnerable inmates are not being identified early enough. I
asked the question again on 31 January—over a month ago—and
the Minister’s Department has still not come back to me
with that vital information.
Prison should offer a unique opportunity to provide mental
health treatment in a secure environment, but the
Government are betraying the vulnerable people our criminal
justice system is supposed to protect. I met
representatives of the Prison Officers Association who told
me that, despite having worked in the Prison Service for
decades, they had never received any mental health
training. A recent Royal College of Psychiatrists forensic
faculty survey found that service cuts mean most prison
psychiatrists do not feel able to deliver a basic level of
care. It is clear that the mental health services in our
prisons are buckling. On a recent visit to a local prison,
I saw at first hand the lack of care and services available
to inmates. A recent consultation by the Centre for Mental
Health found that a decrease in prison staff meant inmates
often missed psychiatric appointments because there was no
one available to escort them, and consequently they could
not get the treatment they needed.
This is the stark reality that has been created by
decimating staffing levels in prisons. There are 7,000
fewer prison officers than when the coalition Government
came to power in 2010. The impacts of such drastic cuts are
not trivial. Our prison services are out of control.
Assaults in prisons rose by a third in the 12 months to
September 2016 and are the highest on record. There was a
wave of prison riots in the final weeks of last year,
including at Birmingham, Bedford, Swaleside and Lewes. The
inconvenient truth for the Minister is that, as things
stand, he cannot guarantee the security of anyone who sets
foot in our prisons.
Her Majesty’s inspectorate of prisons has found that an
increasing number of prisoners report feeling unsafe in
prison. Yesterday, we heard the conclusions drawn from an
unannounced inspection of HMP Featherstone. We heard that
some prisoners felt so unsafe in the prison that they
resorted to self-isolation, asking to be locked up for
nearly 24 hours a day. In some instances, this had lasted
for months.
Nationally, there has been a significant increase in the
ratio of prisoners to prison staff. It is not only
prisoners who do not feel safe, but hard-working staff who
brave the frontline every day, aware that there might
simply not be anyone there to back them up if an incident
becomes unmanageable.
A couple of weeks ago, BBC’s “Panorama” aired an undercover
investigation that was filmed inside HMP Northumberland. I
am sure anyone who watched it was, like me, appalled to see
the truth about prison life laid bare: pervasive violence;
widespread drug use; security systems not fit for
purpose—put simply, chaos.
During this debate, it is important to remember that part
of the reason this dire situation has arisen is that far
too many people have been inappropriately put in prison,
when they should be receiving mental health treatment in a
secure inpatient unit. There is a need to address how the
courts treat people with mental health problems,
particularly in respect of community sentences and the
inclusion of mental health treatment requirements within
those.
I have been raising questions about suicide and self-harm
in our prisons for many years, but I was compelled to
request this debate because of one particular case, the
tragic case of Dean Saunders. He was just 25 years old when
he died by his own hand at Chelmsford prison in Essex last
year. I had the privilege of meeting Dean’s parents, Mark
and Donna, to hear about this tragic case in their own
words. Dean was suffering from severe mental illness and
had harmed himself and his brother and father as they tried
to help him during a paranoid episode. He was charged with
attempted murder and sent to prison. His family were told
that there he would be safe.
The inquest jury unanimously concluded that Care UK, the
private company that ran healthcare at the prison, treated
“financial considerations” as a significant reason behind
the decision to downgrade him from constant watch to
half-hourly observations, despite several warnings that he
might harm himself. It said that there were “multiple
failings”, including a “complacent” approach to Dean’s
mental health. The jury found an assessment of his mental
health needs was “not adequately conducted” and concluded
that the cause of death was “contributed to by neglect”.
The system failed because of financial cuts in the prison
budget, and Mr Saunders paid for it with his life. Despite
that damning verdict, Care UK continues to provide
healthcare, including mental health services, to more than
22,000 prisoners in many prisons across the UK.
I note that the Justice Secretary has met Mr Saunders’
family, and I welcome that, but Mr Saunders presented a
high risk of suicide—he should never have been in a prison
in the first place. He needed specialist treatment in a
secure mental health facility to protect him, but none was
made available.
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Dr Poulter
Does the hon. Lady agree that one of the problems may well
be that people are siloed into being under either the care
of forensic psychiatry or that of the prison system? There
is very little and very poor interaction between the
general mental health system and what goes on in prison,
particularly in terms of helping people to receive the
adequate care in the community that they need when they
leave prison on discharge.
-
There have been many reports, inquiries and recommendations
that highlight the very point the hon. Gentleman
made—reports dating back to 10 years ago. I hope the
Minister will reflect in his response on the reports,
inquiries and recommendations that have already been put
forward and outline what he will do to ensure that that
current separation is adequately addressed to prevent
situations like this case. What are Ministers going to do
to ensure that similar situations to what happened to Dean
never happen again?
The shocking and shameful rise in suicide and self-harm is
happening on this Government’s watch and the Minister must
outline his plan of action today. These are not statistics;
they are real human beings—somebody’s father, somebody’s
mother, somebody’s daughter or somebody’s son. The
Government cannot get away with sweeping this issue under
the carpet for a second longer. I note that the Joint
Committee on Human Rights is also conducting an inquiry on
this issue and I hope that today’s debate might be a
precursor to the outcomes of that inquiry.
Last month, in Justice questions, I raised Mr Saunders’
case. The Under-Secretary of State for Justice, the hon.
Member for Bracknell (Dr Lee) told me that he was
“seeking the details of all those cases to see whether
there is a pattern in why they are happening. I hope to
come forward later in the year with suggestions for policy
change relating to mental health assessments in
prisons.”—[Official Report, 24 January 2017; Vol. 620, c.
156.]
An assessment is not, in and of itself, enough. However,
when I sought more details in a written parliamentary
question, the Secretary of State’s answer exposed a U-turn
on any plans for such an investigation. Although another
exploration of data would have been wholly inadequate, it
would at least have been something. Now it seems that the
Government have no plans in place to confront this crisis.
If the Minister thinks that a further review of the
evidence is needed, I am here to disabuse him. If he thinks
we need more consultation, I am afraid he is mistaken.
Countless inquiries and reports have been conducted, which
have a plethora of very practical recommendations to their
name. There was the review carried out by on women and,
significantly, the Harris review on self-inflicted deaths
of young people, which was the most comprehensive review of
suicide in prison and heard directly from bereaved
families. Many important recommendations on learning and
accountability were put forward, which so far have been
rejected.
Families tell us time and again that what they want after a
tragedy like this is for no one else to go through a
similar experience and for concrete changes to be made.
Ultimately, we are seeing the same failings repeated time
and again in this pattern of preventable deaths. There is
currently a significant accountability gap. Deeds, not
words, are what is needed now; a concrete plan of action is
necessary, not yet another ministerial speech. I say that
in memory of all those who have died by suicide in our
prisons. It is unacceptable. We abolished the death penalty
half a century ago for very good reason. Now we must ensure
that in 2017, no prisoner pays the penalty of their life
because of the failure in our prison system. I look forward
to the Minister’s response.
11.15 am
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The Parliamentary Under-Secretary of State for Justice (Mr
Sam Gyimah)
It is a pleasure to serve under your chairmanship, Mr
Chope. I congratulate the hon. Member for Liverpool,
Wavertree (Luciana Berger) on securing today’s debate, and
I thank my hon. Friend the Member for Central Suffolk and
North Ipswich (Dr Poulter) for his insightful
interventions.
I extend my particular thanks and welcome to Mark Saunders,
the father of Dean Saunders who tragically died by his own
hand in Chelmsford prison, for joining us for the debate. I
reiterate the point that the Secretary of State and I made
to him when we met: I very much look forward to working
with him to bring in some real solutions to the challenge
of suicides in our prisons.
Like the hon. Lady, I am concerned that the rates of
suicide and self-harm in our prisons are too high. It is an
issue that transcends political parties, despite our
obviously different perspectives on the reforms needed in
our prisons. My priority as prisons Minister is to provide
leadership and to drive improvement across the system to
bring those rates down.
As hon. Members will recognise, some of the problems in our
prisons have long roots. It will take time to refocus the
system on rehabilitation and reform but, as the last set of
statistics for levels of suicide and self-harm reaffirm, we
must also take urgent and decisive action to make prisons
places of safety for those prisoners who are at risk.
The challenge of record levels of suicide and self-harm in
prisons is a complex one and there is no simple solution.
We know that prisoners are a high-risk population and that
many of them come into the prison system with drug or
alcohol problems, isolation, social disadvantage,
experience of sexual or physical abuse, or mental health
problems. All those factors increase the risk of self-harm
or suicide among prisoners. We acknowledge that the nature
of a custodial experience can further increase those risks,
but that should not serve as an excuse.
-
Dr (Ealing Central and Acton)
(Lab)
I am encouraged by the Minister’s comments. Is he aware of
figures from De Montfort University that show that 46% of
women in custody have previously attempted suicide and that
women in the criminal justice system on average die 16
years younger than their counterparts? Will he acknowledge
that that issue should be part of the ongoing dialogue that
is needed between the mental health and the criminal
justice systems?
-
Mr (in the
Chair)
Order. I did say to the hon. Lady earlier that
interventions from Opposition spokespersons are not allowed
in a short Westminster Hall debate. I have re-confirmed
that that is the ruling, so I am not going to allow the
Minister to respond to that intervention. I apologise to
the mover of the debate for the interruption.
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Mr Gyimah
Any loss of life, whether male or female, is tragic. I
would hope that my comments will address the issues in
female as well as male prisons.
Deaths in the early days and weeks of custody are highest
after reception, sentencing, transfer or recall. There are
also significant numbers of deaths among lifers and other
prisoners late into long sentences. We are developing a
package of reforms as part of the prison safety and reform
programme, and we will consult with a range of external
stakeholders to seek their views on the action that will be
taken to address the complex issue of suicide and self-harm
in prisons.
In a written question, the hon. Member for Liverpool,
Wavertree asked about the internal review. I assure her
that there is an inquiry under way to look at all deaths in
custody in the past year and to further our understanding
of why those events are happening. She will know what the
results of that inquiry are as soon as they are available.
The early days and weeks in custody are particularly
critical, and we are taking steps to ensure that when
somebody enters a prison they are given the support they
need at that important time. We are rolling out new
training courses across the estate to help our staff to
identify risks and triggers of suicide and self-harm and to
understand what they can do to support prisoners at risk.
That involves awareness training for prison staff on
supporting prisoners with mental health issues. The new
package consists of six sections that can be delivered to
both new and existing staff either in succession or in a
modular form.
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Dr Poulter
I thank the Minister for his answers. To clarify, will that
training for prison officers be compulsory or voluntary,
and will it be carried out according to the amount of
funding available?
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Mr Gyimah
We are making the training available to all prisons, and we
expect prison governors to ensure that as many of their
staff as possible can take it—particularly those who are
operating on wings and have direct contact with prisoners.
The full training package takes about 1.5 days to complete.
-
Will the Minister give way?
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Mr Gyimah
I would like to make some progress and develop these
points. I will perhaps take an intervention later.
We are also making improvements to the assessment, care in
custody and teamwork process—the case management process in
place in our prisons to support and manage prisoners at
risk—and identifying opportunities to make it more
effective. That includes changes to relevant training and
developing a new self-harm diagnostic tool for use by
prison governors and staff, which brings together
information for each prison about numbers and types of
incident, and where and when in the prison they are
happening.
We are also improving infrastructure and partnerships. To
support governors and prison staff across the estate, we
have put in place specialist roles—regional safer custody
leads—in every region to provide advice to prisons and to
spread good practice on identifying and supporting
prisoners at risk. We are also committed to developing
partnerships with others who can help us. In addition to
the funding already provided to support the prisoner
listener scheme, we will be providing extra funding for the
Samaritans to provide targeted support for prison staff and
to prisoners directly, including by piloting emotional
resilience training for new prisoners, delivered by
released ex-listeners.
In the immediate term, a national learning day will be held
on 14 March for prison staff on suicide and self-harm. We
also strive to continue to learn from others and from
completed and ongoing reviews. It is critical that we
respond to the independent advisory panel’s ongoing review
of women’s self-inflicted deaths. We continue to benefit
from individual reviews into deaths in custody by the
prisons and probation ombudsman. As hon. Members will have
seen, we have introduced the Prisons and Courts Bill, which
contains measures to put the ombudsman on to a statutory
footing, with powers of entry and requirements on the
Secretary of State to publish responses to the ombudsman’s
reports. It will give those reports real teeth and will
introduce an imperative in the system to follow through the
recommendations and ensure that they are implemented. The
Bill gives effect to long-standing commitments by
successive Governments to give the ombudsman permanent
status. I hope that hon. Members will welcome and support
the Bill as it progresses through the House.
We will also redouble our efforts to support protective and
environmental factors, which evidence tells us reduce risk.
We know that strengthening family ties and peer support can
support prisoners’ wellbeing and make custody safer.
Governors will be held to account for the family services
in their prison, and from autumn 2017 the family service
budgets will be devolved to governors so that they have
flexibility over how they resource family services to best
meet the needs of their prisoners. We are also supporting
digital developments in prisons, including the roll-out of
in-cell telephony, to enable prisoners to call their
families more easily and at cheaper rates. We will learn
from ’s review to
investigate how helping prisoners to engage with their
families can support their rehabilitation and provide
encouragement.
-
rose—
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Mr Gyimah
The hon. Lady is itching to make an intervention, so I will
give way.
-
I thank the Minister for very kindly giving way. I can see
he is about to conclude, and we still have a few minutes
left in the debate. Can I bring him back to two points?
First, on the training that may or may not be available to
prison staff, I urge him to reflect on the fact that there
are people who have served in our Prison Service for
decades but have never received any mental health training.
It is important that every single one of them receives such
training. Secondly, is the Minister’s Department looking at
how to reduce risk in prisons, in the same way as we reduce
the risks from ligature points in mental health settings?
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Mr Gyimah
On the hon. Lady’s second question, absolutely yes, we are
reducing risk in prisons, in terms of the fabric in cells
and so on. In addition to the training and opportunities
for prison officers to become better skilled and better
able to identify suicide risk and to deal with mental
health issues, last week, as she will be aware, we
announced a promotion for all band 3 officers—they can get
promoted to band 4 and get an additional salary at band 4
if they specialise in certain roles in prison. One of them
is specifically to do with safer custody. Therefore, a
prison officer today can choose to specialise as a safer
custody officer and get paid more to do so. Some 2,000
prison officers across the country could benefit from that
increase in pay and from the training that I have outlined.
In the light of the disproportionate number of self-harm
incidents among female prisoners, we are exploring ways of
improving family links, including overnight visits, family
days, child-centred visits, homework clubs and the delivery
of relationship and parenting programmes. We are also
taking account of evidence that shows that prison
environments have a direct impact on prisoners’ wellbeing
and rehabilitation, as the hon. Lady rightly pointed out.
Our plans for estate transformation include ensuring that
prison sites are configured to support prisoners’ access to
fresh air, exercise and meaningful activity.
Fundamental to supporting that activity and improving the
safety of all those living and working in our prisons will
be the recruitment of the additional 2,500 frontline staff
we are funding. Extra staff will enable prison officers to
conduct new ways of working and transform the culture in
our prisons, so that every prison officer is responsible
for the supervision and support of about six prisoners. The
1:6 model is in part based on the work of Lord Toby Harris
on self-inflicted deaths, which particularly focused on the
youth estate. That is why we are introducing the important
key worker role.
-
I thank the Minister for very kindly giving way again. Does
he accept that those are not additional staff, but merely a
replacement of the staff that have already been cut? We have
lost more than 7,000 prison officers since 2010. We have only
to look at the outcome of the inspection at Northumberland
prison to see that there is a very significant issue of
prisoners feeling so unsafe that they do not feel able to
leave their cells.
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Mr Gyimah
The 2,500 staff are additional to what we have, so at the end
of 2018 we will have 2,500 additional officers. The
baseline—the comparison with 2010—is not accurate because,
although we lost 7,000 prison officers, we closed down 18
prisons. We are looking at a completely new baseline.
However, the most important thing is the one-to-one support
from a dedicated officer, which is at the heart of our prison
reforms, ensuring that prisoners first and foremost are safe
to benefit from the help they need to quit drugs, participate
in education and skills programmes and acquire the skills to
prepare for life after release.
The hon. Lady asked about the 75% of prisoners—she
alleged—who face delays in being transferred to NHS hospitals
beyond the 14-day deadline. That is obviously a serious
concern, and I will work closely with Department of Health
partners to look into it. Health partners are obviously
important in supporting prisoners and meeting their physical
and mental health needs. In 2015, just to put the statistic
out there, there were 1,010 transfer admissions to secure
hospitals from prison, but I admit that a lot more needs to
be done.
I read the inquest report into the incredibly tragic death of
Dean Saunders. Like the hon. Lady, I agree that we are a long
way short of where we should be in terms of preventing such
self-inflicted deaths. The points I have enumerated today
show what we are doing now, and we will come forward with
even more detail and further reforms to ensure that we bring
down the number of these deaths as much as we possibly can. I
look forward to working with the hon. Lady—I will be willing
to discuss these issues in detail with her—and with the
Saunders family and a number of other families who have lost
loved ones in this way.
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