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Home / Crime and Justice / UK Prisons: Inmates Dying Due to Healthcare Failures

UK Prisons: Inmates Dying Due to Healthcare Failures

22 Nov

•

Summary

  • Inmates with epilepsy are dying needlessly due to healthcare failures.
  • Prisoners are over four times more likely to die from SUDEP.
  • A quarter of prisoners with epilepsy didn't receive entitled care.
UK Prisons: Inmates Dying Due to Healthcare Failures

A critical review has exposed widespread healthcare failures within Britain's prisons, resulting in the needless deaths of inmates, particularly those with epilepsy. The Prisons and Probation Ombudsman's report reveals that prisoners are significantly more likely to die from Sudden Unexpected Death in Epilepsy (SUDEP) compared to the general population.

Further investigation indicates that almost a quarter of prisoners who died from epilepsy in the past ten years did not receive the care they were entitled to. This neglect has led to deeply distressing situations, with grieving families questioning if adequate care could have saved their loved ones, such as Trevor Monerville and Amarjit Singh, whose deaths were linked to insufficient epilepsy management and delayed responses.

The findings underscore a systemic issue, with only a small fraction of epileptic prisoners achieving remission and many lacking documented care plans. The ombudsman is calling for urgent changes, including mandatory care plans, shared cells, and careful consideration of transfers to ensure continuity of care, aiming to prevent further tragic loss of life within custody.

Disclaimer: This story has been auto-aggregated and auto-summarised by a computer program. This story has not been edited or created by the Feedzop team.
Inmates with epilepsy are reportedly not receiving adequate care, with instances of uncontrolled seizures in single cells and delayed emergency responses, leading to preventable deaths.
Prisoners with epilepsy are over four times more likely to die from sudden unexpected death compared to the general population.
Recommendations include ensuring all epileptic prisoners have a care plan, are housed in shared cells, and that transfers are managed to maintain care continuity.

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