Psychiatric court reports and diversion outcomes in a remand prison over three years

There has been a notable increase in requests for psychiatric reports from District Courts for persons remanded to Ireland's main remand prison, Cloverhill. We aimed to identify if reports were prepared for persons with severe mental illness and if they led to therapeutic benefits such as diver...

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Veröffentlicht in:Irish journal of psychological medicine 2024-09, Vol.41 (3), p.337-347
Hauptverfasser: Tong, Kezanne, Smith, Damian, Mohan, Christopher, Hickey, Philip, Taylor, Enda, McLoughlin, Lisa, Kennedy, Harry G., O’Neill, Conor
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container_end_page 347
container_issue 3
container_start_page 337
container_title Irish journal of psychological medicine
container_volume 41
creator Tong, Kezanne
Smith, Damian
Mohan, Christopher
Hickey, Philip
Taylor, Enda
McLoughlin, Lisa
Kennedy, Harry G.
O’Neill, Conor
description There has been a notable increase in requests for psychiatric reports from District Courts for persons remanded to Ireland's main remand prison, Cloverhill. We aimed to identify if reports were prepared for persons with severe mental illness and if they led to therapeutic benefits such as diversion to healthcare. Measures of equitability between Cloverhill and other District Courts were explored. For District Court-requested reports completed by the Prison Inreach and Court Liaison Service (PICLS) at Cloverhill Prison from 2015 to 2017, we recorded clinical variables and therapeutic outcomes such as diversion to inpatient psychiatric settings. Of 236 cases, over half were diverted to inpatient or outpatient psychiatric care. One-third of remand episodes were admitted to a psychiatric hospital, mainly in non-forensic settings. Nearly two-thirds had major mental illness, mainly schizophrenia and related conditions. Almost half had active psychosis. Cases in Cloverhill District Court and other District Courts were similarly likely to have active psychosis (47% overall) and hospital admission (33% overall). Voluntary reports were more likely to identify active psychosis, with over 90% diverted to inpatient or outpatient community treatment settings. This is the first large scale study of diversion outcomes following requests for psychiatric advice from District Courts in Ireland. Requests were mainly appropriate. Over half led to diversion from the criminal justice system to healthcare settings. There is a need for a complementary network of diversion initiatives at every stage of the criminal justice system to effectively divert mentally ill individuals to appropriate settings at the earliest possible stage.
doi_str_mv 10.1017/ipm.2021.64
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subjects Clinical outcomes
Criminal law
District courts
Health services
Legislation
Mental disorders
Mental health care
Original Research
Patients
Prisons
title Psychiatric court reports and diversion outcomes in a remand prison over three years
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