August 29, 2022

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Health care for those in police custody can reach a vulnerable population

Credit: Unsplash/CC0 Public Domain
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Credit: Unsplash/CC0 Public Domain

Detainees in police watch-houses have complex health needs in a difficult environment that nevertheless provides a unique chance to "intercept a vulnerable, complex and otherwise hard-to-reach population, and identify unmet health needs," according the authors of a Perspective published today by the Medical Journal of Australia.

Professor Julia Crilly, Professor of Emergency Care at Gold Coast Hospital and Health Service and Griffith University, and colleagues reflect on a recent report that indicates 43 (9%) of the 505 deaths in custody between 1991 and 2016 occurred in a police station, police vehicle, police cell, or watch-house. Almost half of those were deaths due to a medical cause (49%).

"As a group, [police watch-house detainees] are largely disconnected from health services, so beyond their immediate, untreated health problems, comparatively little is known about underlying and unaddressed social determinants," Crilly and colleagues wrote.

"Access to health care in short term custody settings can be hampered by a range of underlying contexts, structures and processes of health care delivery."

Crilly and colleagues have been studying the key challenges for people and systems responsible for the health and safety of detainees in short-term custody.

Individual level challenges:

System level challenges:

Inter-agency challenges:

"Despite the myriad of challenges, watch-house detention provides a unique opportunity to intercept a vulnerable, complex and otherwise hard-to-reach population, and identify unmet health needs," Crilly and colleagues wrote.

They suggested increased access to health care providers in watch-houses, models of health care in watch-houses closely linked with public health services and administered by a health care agency rather than the police service, continuity of care, a shared electronic medical record, and "a broader governance framework that promotes integration between watch-house and community health care providers."

"These goals will require a sustained, coordinated investment in intersectoral collaboration. The overlap of health and law enforcement offers important opportunities to support delivery to detainees. It is time to capitalize on these opportunities," Crilly and colleagues concluded.

More information: Julia L Crilly et al, Health care in police watch‐houses: a challenge and an opportunity, Medical Journal of Australia (2022). DOI: 10.5694/mja2.51688

Journal information: Medical Journal of Australia

Provided by Medical Journal of Australia

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