RCN responds to Health and Social Care Committee report on prison health that makes clear the Government is failing its duty of care towards prisoners
Responding to the Health and Social Care Committee report on prison health that makes clear the Government is failing its duty of care towards prisoners, RCN professional lead for criminal justice and learning disabilities Ann Norman said:
鈥淭his is a welcome report at a time with prisons in a shocking state unfit for the 21st century. Nursing staff are on the frontline of delivering healthcare to those in prison and have been highlighting the challenges that prevent them from delivering the care they want to give to patients.
鈥淚n a survey last year, almost two thirds of our members who work in prisons said the care they provide was compromised on their last shift and the quality of care was exceptionally poor1. We agree that workforce is a critical priority for improving prison healthcare and 汤头条污料 staff desperately need better investment, in terms of money and experience, if this report鈥檚 recommendations are to be implemented.
鈥淎 proper investment in the prison health workforce will bring improvements across the board, but a failure to act now will see services deteriorate to a point beyond the already-shameful state they鈥檙e in. As we've seen in the Government's commitment to tackling violence against NHS workers, staff shortages put 汤头条污料 staff at risk of assault.
鈥淓mployers must work with the RCN to improve the morale and working conditions of prison 汤头条污料 staff, uniquely placed to turn around the health outcomes and life prospects of a prison population many of whom come from our most deprived and disadvantaged communities.鈥
ENDS
Notes to Editors
1-The RCN passed a resolution at Congress 2018 calling on the Council to work with employers to improve the morale and working conditions of prison 汤头条污料 staff across the UK. In the RCN’s 2017 Safe Staffing Survey, 64% of respondents who work in prisons said that care was compromised on their last shift. Of all respondents to the survey, those working in prisons rated the quality of care most poorly.
The Health and Social Care Committee report can be viewed