html5-img
1 / 23

Women with Mental Health & Wellbeing Needs in the Criminal Justice System

Women with Mental Health & Wellbeing Needs in the Criminal Justice System. Forensic Mental Health Practitioner Service – Women’s Services. Welcome!. Introductions Workshop Content Any questions?. Together’s Forensic Mental Health Practitioner Service .

tate
Télécharger la présentation

Women with Mental Health & Wellbeing Needs in the Criminal Justice System

An Image/Link below is provided (as is) to download presentation Download Policy: Content on the Website is provided to you AS IS for your information and personal use and may not be sold / licensed / shared on other websites without getting consent from its author. Content is provided to you AS IS for your information and personal use only. Download presentation by click this link. While downloading, if for some reason you are not able to download a presentation, the publisher may have deleted the file from their server. During download, if you can't get a presentation, the file might be deleted by the publisher.

E N D

Presentation Transcript


  1. Women with Mental Health & Wellbeing Needs in the Criminal Justice System Forensic Mental Health Practitioner Service – Women’s Services

  2. Welcome! • Introductions • Workshop Content • Any questions?

  3. Together’s Forensic Mental Health Practitioner Service • How we work to support vulnerable defendants and offenders • Mental Health provision in Probation • Court Liaison and Diversion mental health provision • Earlier identification in police station liaison and diversion services • Dedicated services for Women • Partnerships

  4. Dedicated services for Women in the Criminal Justice SystemWhy women – only services? • Health and social care inequalities • CJ involvement is only one of poor outcomes • Issues facing women in CJS – Delegates experience?

  5. Together’s model of working with women defendants • What is your experience of WiCJS coming to the attention of MH Services? • How we work in Courts • Working in a gender-appropriate and a Trauma – Informed way • Links to accommodation partners

  6. Quizz On your chairs you have found cards We will now go through a few statements If you agree – indicate by lifting the GREEN card If you disagree – use the RED card

  7. #1 In the last 15 years, the number of women in prison has more or less remained the same

  8. #2 Women commit a different range of offences from men. They commit more acquisitive crime and have a lower involvement in serious violence, criminal damage and professional crime. However, proportionately, more women than men are remanded in custody

  9. #3 The cost of keeping a woman in prison for 1 year is £23,600, while the cost of a Community Order is just under half of that.

  10. #4 51% of women in prison have mental health needs and 32% of women in prison have a long-standing illness

  11. #5 Almost 7 in 10 women in prison reported committed the offence(s) while under the influence of illegal drugs and/or in order to obtain money to buy drugs

  12. #6 48% of women in prison reported having committed offences to support someone else’s drug use

  13. #7 Women in prison self-harm twice as often as men in prison

  14. #8 Women with histories of violence and abuse are over represented in the criminal justice system: More than 50% of women in prison have experienced domestic violence; 1 in 3 has experienced sexual abuse

  15. #9 30% of women in prison lose their accommodation while in prison

  16. #10 18,000 children are separated every year from their mothers, who are women with the chaotic homes lives, severe poverty and who offend

  17. Sources: • Ministry of Justice (2013). Gender differences in substance misuse and mental health amongst prisoners: Results from the Surveying Prisoner Crime Reduction (SPCR) longitudinal cohort study of prisoners. • Ministry of Justice (2011). Statistics on Women and the Criminal Justice System. • Home Office (2007). The Corston Report: Review of women with particular vulnerabilities in the Criminal Justice System. • Ministry of Justice (2012). A Distinct Approach: A guide to working with Women in the Criminal Justice System. • Together for Mental Wellbeing (2013): A Common Sense Guide to working with women with health and wellbeing needs in the criminal justice system. • www.womensbreakout.org.uk • www.womeninprison.org.uk

  18. An important point Same treatment does not result in equal outcomes

  19. And another one! Think in the context of trauma Think holistically

  20. Case Study • We will work in groups • You all have the same case study • Identify the Issues discussion in groups • Feedback to wider group

  21. Think “trauma” • Now consider this client’s presentation and needs in the context of experiences of abuse and complex trauma

  22. Case Scenarios Each group has a different outcome for the case to consider All of them are realistic What are your thoughts?

  23. Thank you!Evaluation Forms  Frankie Clayman Women’s FMHP at Thames Magistrates Court Eva Roussou Project Coordinator/ Women’s Lead Forensic Mental Health Practitioner Service eva-roussou@together-uk.org

More Related