Sophie Walker discusses mental health in prisons in Custodial Review Magazine

My work in the criminal justice system stretches from cradle to grave: I work with pregnant women and new mothers facing custodial sentences, young defendants in youth offender institutions and older prisoners who have spent decades inside. I also represent bereaved families at inquests whose loved ones have died in prison or while on probation, as a result of mental health issues. If there is one thing that unites these people, it is that they entered the criminal justice system in poor mental health, and left it worse.

I was recently instructed in an inquest on behalf of a family whose loved one died on the day of his release. A report from his treating psychiatrist in prison outlined his reasons for prescribing him a strong anti-psychotic drug during his prison sentence. They explained that it is common for prisoners to start experiencing psychosis despite not having any underlying mental health disorders like schizophrenia. In other words, the experience of incarceration can seriously impact a prisoner’s mental health.

The prison community is a vulnerable one. As reported by the Prison Reform Trust, 26% of women and 16% of men had received treatment for a mental health problem the year before they entered custody. While only 4% of general public have symptoms indicative of psychosis, 25% of women and 15% of men in prison do. Further, you are 8.6 times more likely to commit suicide in prison than on the outside.

While it is no surprise that prisoners face difficulties in accessing mental health support while in prison, what is even more concerning is that 40% of prison officers, who are at the coalface of the prison mental health crisis lack the training they need to know how to help a prisoner for support.

An initiative developed in collaboration with NHS England and the Probation Service called the Offender Personality Disorder pathway is helping to train officers on how to manage prisoners who can pose a high risk of harm to themselves and to others, so progress is being made.

Given that around two-thirds of prisoners meet the criteria for at least one type of personality disorder, the pathway develops treatment services for prisoners in prisons and support as they transition into the community. Such initiatives are desperately needed if we are to go from warehousing prisoners, to rehabilitating them, but a woeful lack of funding means that sending staff on training courses like this isn’t always possible.

To read the full article, as featured in Custody Review Magazine, click here

Related Barristers: Sophie Walker

Updates

Latest News

Our latest cases, upcoming events and news

news
Dharsha Jegatheeswaran secures unanimous not guilty verdict for her client charged with religiously aggravated intentional strangulation
The jury returned a unanimous verdict of not guilty after less than an hour of deliberation.
Dharsha Jegatheeswaran
news
R v KM & Others [2025] Crown Court at Woolwich
Grace Cowell acted as junior counsel for a defendant charged with a conspiracy to rob over £1 million worth of watches.
Grace Cowell
news
Parosha Chandran confirmed as speaker at international human trafficking & modern slavery seminar
Parosha is speaking at Oxford University on 21st November alongside panellists including Hilary Clinton, Theresa May and many more.
Parosha Chandran