Background
In
recent years, an abstinence-focused, ‘recovery’ agenda has emerged in UK drug
policy, largely in response to the perception that many opioid users had been
‘parked indefinitely’ on Opioid Substitution Therapy (OST). The introduction of
ten pilot ‘Drug Recovery Wings’ (DRWs) in 2011 represents the application of
this recovery agenda to prisons. This paper describes the DRWs’ operational
models, the place of opiate dependent prisoners within them, and the challenges
of delivering ‘recovery’ in prison.
Methods
In
2013, the implementation and operational models of all ten pilot DRWs were
rapidly assessed. Up to three days were spent in each DRW, undertaking
semi-structured interviews with a sample of 94 DRW staff and 102 DRW residents.
Interviews were fully transcribed, and coded using grounded theory. Findings
from the nine adult prisons are presented here.
Results
Four
types of DRW were identified, distinguished by their size and selection
criteria. Strikingly, no mid- or large-sized units regularly supported OST
recipients through detoxification. Type A were large units whose residents were
mostly on OST with long criminal records and few social or personal resources.
Detoxification was rare, and medication reduction slow. Type B's mid-sized DRW
was developed as a psychosocial support service for OST clients seeking
detoxification. However, staff struggled to find such prisoners, and detoxification
again proved rare. Type C DRWs focused on abstinence from all drugs, including
OST. Though OST clients were not intentionally excluded, very few applied to
these wings. Only Type D DRWs, offering intensive treatment on very small
wings, regularly recruited OST recipients into abstinence-focused
interventions.
Conclusion
Prison
units wishing to support OST recipients in making greater progress towards
abstinence may need to be small, intensive and take a stepped approach based on
preparatory motivational work and extensive preparation for release. However,
concerns about post-release deaths will remain.
Purchase full article at: http://goo.gl/fbXIqP
By: Geoff
Page, Lorna Templeton,
Sharon Grace,
Paul Roberts,
Neil McKeganey,
Chris Russell,
Alison Liebling,
Zetta Kougali,
Charlie Lloyd
Affiliations
Mental Health and Addictions Research Group, Department of
Health Sciences, University of York, YO10 5DD
Correspondence
Corresponding author. ARC/208a, Area 4, ARRC Building,
Department of Health Sciences, University of York, YO10 5DD. Tel.: +01904
321670.
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