Preventing Suicide in Prisons, Part II

Author:

Daigle Marc S.1,Daniel Anasseril E.2,Dear Greg E.3,Frottier Patrick4,Hayes Lindsay M.5,Kerkhof Ad6,Konrad Norbert7,Liebling Alison8,Sarchiapone Marco9

Affiliation:

1. University of Québec at Trois-Rivières and Centre for Research and Intervention on Suicide and Euthanasia (CRISE), Canada

2. University of Missouri School of Medicine, Columbia, MO, USA

3. Edith Cowan University, Joondalup, Australia

4. J.A. Mittersteig, Vienna, Austria

5. National Center on Institutions and Alternatives, Mansfield, MA, USA

6. Vrije Universiteit, Amsterdam, The Netherlands

7. Institute of Forensic Psychiatry Charité, Berlin, Germany

8. Cambridge Institute of Criminology, Cambridge, UK

9. University of Molise, Campobasso, Italy

Abstract

Abstract. The International Association for Suicide Prevention created a Task Force on Suicide in Prisons to better disseminate the information in this domain. One of its objectives was to summarize suicide-prevention activities in the prison systems. This study of the Task Force uncovered many differences between countries, although mental health professionals remain central in all suicide prevention activities. Inmate peer-support and correctional officers also play critical roles in suicide prevention but there is great variation in the involvement of outside community workers. These differences could be explained by the availability of resources, by the structure of the correctional and community services, but mainly by the different paradigms about suicide prevention. While there is a common and traditional paradigm that suicide prevention services are mainly offered to individuals by mental health services, correctional systems differ in the way they include (or not) other partners of suicide prevention: correctional officers, other employees, peer inmates, chaplains/priests, and community workers. Circumstances, history, and national cultures may explain such diversity but they might also depend on the basic way we think about suicide prevention at both individual and environmental levels.

Publisher

Hogrefe Publishing Group

Subject

Psychiatry and Mental health

Reference20 articles.

1. Adjusting to Prison Life

2. Bennett, L.A. (1988). Current views on inmate visiting. Proceedings of the First National Conference on the Family and Corrections, Sacramento. Retrieved July 10, 2007, from www.ifs.univie.ac.at/uncjin/mosaic/famcorr/fmcorcon3.html

3. Blaauw, E., Kerkhof, A.J.F.M. (1999). Suicides in detentie. [Suicides in prison]. Den Haag, The Netherlands: Elsevier

4. Demographic, Criminal, and Psychiatric Factors Related to Inmate Suicide

5. Identifying Suicide Risk in Penal Institutions in the Netherlands

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