The standard of health care in prisons should be equivalent to that provided in the community. Prison populations are multiply disadvantaged and primary health care practitioners in prisons routinely face organisational and ethical challenges which are rare in community‐based general practice. This raises the question of whether doctors working in prisons consider they would benefit from additional clinical skills or training, the range of prison‐specific competencies they consider important and what they would like to see included in induction programmes. Through a series of semi‐structured, faceto‐face interviews with doctors and health care managers working in prisons, this study sought to identify views on the training needs for doctors working in prisons. Practitioners demonstrated that induction processes were varied and fragmented and that delivering primary care in prisons raised additional clinical and organisational challenges. Relationships with prisoner patients were generally good. Few ethical issues were raised by this small sample, with the exception of confidentiality. However, aspirations towards equivalence were tempered by tensions between custodial needs and clinical requirements, and more research should be directed to the ways practitioners negotiate this interface. Induction programmes should ensure that all practitioners receive practical and ethical guidance to help them address these tensions.
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1 January 2006
This article was originally published in
International Journal of Prisoner Health
Review Article|
January 01 2006
General practice in prisons in England: Views from the field Available to Purchase
Linda Marks;
Linda Marks
Centre for Public Policy and Health, School for Health, Wolfson Research Institute, Durham University, Queen’s Campus, Stockton on Tees, UK
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Andrew Gray;
Andrew Gray
Centre for Clinical Management Development, School for Health, Wolfson Research Institute, Durham University, Queen’s Campus, Stockton on Tees, UK
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Sarah Pearce
Sarah Pearce
University Hospital of North Durham, Durham, UK
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Publisher: Emerald Publishing
Online ISSN: 1744-9219
Print ISSN: 1744-9200
© Emerald Group Publishing Limited
2006
Int J Prison Health (2006) 2 (1): 49–62.
Citation
Marks L, Gray A, Pearce S (2006), "General practice in prisons in England: Views from the field". Int J Prison Health, Vol. 2 No. 1 pp. 49–62, doi: https://doi.org/10.1080/17449200600743628
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