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Cookham Wood concerns grow

Posted: 12 February 2004 | Subscribe Online


Women held at Cookham Wood prison in Rochester, Kent, have been prevented from contacting their families because of staff shortages, a report by the Prisons Inspectorate reveals.

Time out of cell for association was often cancelled and prisoners had been allowed their full period of association for only one weekday in the three months before inspection, the report says. Many had been unable to use telephones to contact their families.

Prison routines should be reviewed to ensure the women receive more time out of cell, chief prisons inspector Anne Owers said. Also more staff were needed.
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Paul Cavadino, chief executive of rehabilitation agency Nacro, warned that when vulnerable women are locked in their cells for excessively long periods because of staff shortages "this can increase their depression and worsen mental disorders with a depressive element".

Owers said that while staff displayed a high level of concern for the women "neither staff nor prisoners were helped by the lack of effective systems and procedures to ensure that this was translated into actual outcomes".

The prison, along with the rest of the women's estate, had been under pressure in the past year with an increase in the needs of prisoners, the report says. The systems in place were not robust enough to protect the safety of the more vulnerable women it was now receiving.

It also highlights concerns about the safeguards for young adult women aged 18-21 who are held on the same wing as adult offenders and recommends much closer supervision.

- Report from: www.homeoffice.gov.uk/justice/prisons/inspprisons


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