Reducing deaths among prison leavers | Nacro

Reducing deaths among prison leavers

Published:

Our report ‘Reducing Deaths Among Prison Leavers’ finds than one person dies every day in the year after leaving prison. Someone leaving prison now is more likely to die within three months of release than a person aged under 75 is over the course of an entire year. 

The report recommends that more should be done to reduce the risk of people dying after release from prison, estimating that up to one in seven drug-related deaths could be avoided if everyone with a history of opioid dependence received drug substitution therapy on the day they left prison.

The number of deaths after release is significantly higher than before the pandemic. While rates peaked during the Covid-19 period, they have not returned to pre-pandemic levels. Compared with people released in 2019/20, someone leaving prison today is 72% more likely to die within two weeks of release and 28% more likely to die within a year.

Drug-related deaths are the largest cause of preventable deaths among prison leavers, accounting for 40% of deaths within the year after release — around three people every week.

Summary of main recommendations:

1) Opioid treatment: All people released from prison with an opioid misuse problem should be offered OST on their day of release.

2) Naloxone: The Ministry of Justice and the Department of Health and Social Care should set and meet a consistent national standard for the distribution of naloxone on release.

3) Access to healthcare: The Department of Health and Social Care should work with the Prisons and Probation Service to ensure that everyone released from prison is registered with a GP and able to access immediate care.

4) Prison-leaver homelessness: The Ministry of Justice and Ministry of Housing, Communities, and Local Government should set out a joint plan to meet their target of halving the proportion of people leaving prison homeless.

Read the full report here