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Styal deaths probe highlights failures

Posted: 29 January 2004 | Subscribe Online


An investigation into six deaths in Styal women's prison in Cheshire has identified "serious inadequacies".

In August 2003, prisons minister Paul Goggins commissioned the prisons and probation ombudsman to investigate the circumstances around the death of Julie Walsh and five other women in the previous 12 months.

The main findings show that the women all died soon after being admitted, two of them having been there for only a day. Three had a history of mental health problems.

The prison's detoxification regime at the time of the deaths was considered inadequate to treat severely dependent users. Meanwhile, its in-patient mental health facility was seen as valuable but "in need of a review in light of pressures on health care staff and the health care needs of the prison".
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The report comes a week after chief prisons inspector Anne Owers published her annual report which claimed "the needs of women are acute and in danger of being neglected or disregarded".

All the recommendations on Styal, including reviews to look at spending at the prison and improve time out of cells, are being acted on.

In addition, the government has established the women's offending reduction programme to co-ordinate and implement a programme of work to address the factors affecting women's offending, including mental health problems and substance misuse.

A priority is to ensure that custody is used only for women who need to be in prison. Some will also benefit from the part-time prisons pilot, which started this week.


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