| Literature DB >> 31134392 |
Caroline Lee1, Samantha Treacy2, Anna Haggith1, Nuwan Darshana Wickramasinghe1,3, Frances Cater1, Isla Kuhn4, Tine Van Bortel1.
Abstract
BACKGROUND: The number of older prisoners has risen exponentially over the last two decades, especially in high-income countries. Due to the increased and somewhat inadequately met health and social care needs of this group of prisoners, coupled with their vulnerability arising from higher levels of isolation, poverty and exploitation, financial costs have spiralled and human rights concerns have grown. This review aimed to present an overview of programmes that addressed older prisoners' social care needs, a particularly underdeveloped area, with a view to assessing the extent to which they could inform policy and practice.Entities:
Keywords: Hospice; Integrative review; Older prisoners; Prison; Prisoner peer support; Social care; Social work; Systematic review
Year: 2019 PMID: 31134392 PMCID: PMC6717991 DOI: 10.1186/s40352-019-0090-0
Source DB: PubMed Journal: Health Justice ISSN: 2194-7899
Indicative search terms used in literature search
| Status/context | Support mechanism/functionality | Condition/Age related disability |
|---|---|---|
| prison* or convict* or felon* or offender* or inmate* or criminal* or jail* or penitentiar* or gaol* or secure or correctional | Nurs* or care or caring or support* or peer* or buddy* or buddies* or friend* or “cell mate*” or mentor* or be-friend* or befriend* or “lay person*” or volunteer* or voluntar* or insider or listener or “mobility disorder” or mobil* or “independent liv*” or “independent life*” or “activities of daily living” or “daily activities” or “daily life activity” or adl* or eadl* or dressing or feeding or eating or toilet* or bathing or “social*(support* or active* or function* or behav* or adjust* or skill*)” or facilitate* or “self care” or “self manage*” or “personal care” or “personal manage*” | frail elderly or frail* or chronic or disabilit* or disabled* age(“degenerate*disorder”) or dementia* or alzheimer* or cognitive defect or “cognition disorder” or parkinson* or mobility* or deaf* or “hearing los*” or “hearing disorder*” or “hearing impair*” or blind* or glaucoma or “macular degenerat*” or “vis* impair*” or “vis* disorder*” or “vis* reduc*” or “vision difficult*” or hearing, or eye or vision or blind or sight or blindness or comorbid* or co-morbid* or terminal* or palliative* or “right to die” or neoplasm or cancer* |
Fig. 1PRISMA flow diagram
Key features of the programmes described in included papers
| Paper No | Author, Year, Country | Study Aim | Study type | Sample Size & Type | Intervention | Caregivers | MAIN FINDINGS for: (i) programme attendees; (ii) prisoner peer supporters (PPS); (iii) programme and prison staff; (iv) the prison; (v) costs |
|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|
| (I) Hospice programmes | |||||||
| 1 | Bronstein & Wright, | To learn about social work & prison staff collaboration | Qualitative –telephone interviews | Hospice – 14 hospices, 11 states | MDT | (i) positive care from PPSs particularly; (ii) transformational impact (self-worth increase); (iii) MDT works well; prison staff support mixed; (iv) prison management supportive, more care = better security, prison as more humane; (v) none discussed | |
| 2 | Cloyes, Rosenkranz, Wold, Berry, & Supiano, | To explore the motivation and impact of hospice work on PPSs | Qualitative survey | Hospice – 5 prisons in Louisiana, inc Angola | MDT PPS | (i) none discussed; (ii) positive impact - (re) construct identity, redemption, expressing true self, paying it forward, developing shared collective identity; (iii) none discussed; (iv) supports sense of prison as community; (v) none discussed | |
| 3 | Cloyes et al., | To identify key factors in providing a prison hospice programme | Qualitative -interviews and observation | Hospice – Louisiana, Angola | MDT; PPS | (i) PPS care high quality; prison staff can protect, but also limit care (eg visits); (ii) critical role, free up staff; (iii) improved hospice staff practice, shared values and teamwork; some prison staff uphold hospice values; (iv) improved prison culture, supportive management – problem solve security issues; (v) none discussed | |
| 4 | Cloyes et al., | To describe how prisoners learn to provide hospice care | Qualitative - interviews and ethnography | n = 43, [Prison officers (n = 5), hospice staff (n = 14), PPS (n = 24)] | Hospice – Louisiana, Angola | MDT; PPS | (i) none discussed; (ii) critical role, work rewarding, but stressful - grief and burn-out issues; (iii) staff support and respect PPSs, with boundaries, see them as enabling the delivery of more comprehensive care; (iv&v) none discussed |
| 5 | Hoffman & Dickinson, | To explore features of hospice programmes | Survey - questionnaires | n = 43 All hospice staff | Hospice – 43 programmes unknown locations | MDTs; PPS 93%, Dietician 45%;Pharmacist 21%; Family 24%; CVs 17%;Psychologist 7% | (i) none discussed; (ii) develop confidence & compassion, but emotional toll; (iii) strongly supportive programme staff; mixed support from prison staff, but lack training; (iv) strongly supportive prisoners and administration, public less so; (v) possible reduction in health care costs (less transportation and security costs), especially if use a DNR admission criteria. |
| 6 | Loeb et al., | To explore end-of life care values and perceptions of PPSs | Qualitative -interviews | Hospice/ End of life care, 4 prisons in one State | MDT ( PPS (half paid) | (i) some staff lack compassion, stong bonds with PPS; (ii) transformative –non-judgmental, help self by helping others, keep out of trouble to continue with work; (iii) respect and support of PPS; (iv) improved relationships and community morale, but focus on security a barrier and some prisoners can be disparaging; (v) none discussed | |
| 7 | Maull, | To describe the development of a prison hospice and its six-month pilot evaluation | Survey - questionnaires | n = unknown Health & prison staff; patients & PPSs | Hospice –Springfield | MDT ( | (i) universally positive – PPSs helped depression, increased activeness; (ii) positive about programme, essential, work as life-enhancing; (iii) bridges are in process of being built with medical staff, with small majority of prison staff supportive but most had no opinion-apathy/lack of awareness; (iv&v) none discussed. |
| 8 | Maull, | To explore issues affecting hospice care delivery | Mixed: Interviews, Questionnaires; expert opinion | n = unknown. Hospice co-ordinators and staff, prison staff, PPSs | Hospice programmes in 7 states | MDT ( | (i) fear and suspicion, some prefer to remain in mainstream prison – friends & more activities unless can get off unit, pain medication poor, trust PPSs and CVs more; (ii) key, redemptive, paying forward, (iii) staff trained to be wary of prisoners & CVs; (iv) security-care conflict, environments typically Spartan; may be seen as a death row; (v) hospice reputation as cost-effective. |
| 9 | Stone, Papadopoulos, & Kelly, | To examine evidence of palliative care in prisons, good practice and barriers | Integrative review | Hospice /end-of-life care (UK = 5, USA-16) | MDT ( | (i) some emotional support esp. from PPSs, but some staff suspicious, and some feel they are undeserving of hospice; lack pain meds, adequate in one study, and some wariness of hospices and DNR orders; (ii) central role, emotionally rewarding, rehabilitative; (iii) suspicion of prisoners, (iv) most hospices fine, one suggested no advantages or special amenities; (v) within-prison hospices can be “cost-effective” | |
| 10 | Supiano, Cloyes, & Berry, | To explore the impact of caring for dying prisoners on PPSs | Qualitative interviews | Hospice – Louisiana Angola | MDT (PT, OT, dietician) PPS | (i) none discussed; (ii) work can exact overwhelming emotional toll on PPSs, sense of purpose and mutual support helps; (iii) support to PPSs from programme staff., prison staff not discussed; (iv) took years for prisoner community to trust in hospice (v) none discussed | |
| 11 | Wion & Loeb, | To review end of life care for prisoners | Systematic review | Hospices/ End of life care - various | MDT ( | (i) good care from PPSs, promote dignity and respect, varied staff care and compassion and pain meds; (ii) transformative (increased compassion and confidence), redemptive, paying it forward, good buffer for staff; (iii) varied reports of: team cohesiveness; prison staff mixed support – security concerns, and not punitive enough; (iv) positive support from management & prisoners although some negative, prison more humane, inappropriate environments for some (buildings, equipment & comfort), lack public support; (v) seen as cost-effective. | |
| 12 | Wright & Bronstein, | To | Qualitative interviews | n = 14, All hospice co-ordinators | Hospice – 14 hospices, 11 states | MDT (inc psychologist, & business) PPS | (i) positive impact, some prison staff see prisoners as undeserving; (ii) vital role, transformed, more compassionate, all positive about their role; (iii) mostly positive programme staff, unsupportive of PPSs in one hospice; prison staff mixed support; (iv) most management supportive (a couple not), more humane prison; coupled with positive media attention; (v) none discussed. |
| 13 | Wright & Bronstein, |
| Qualitative interviews | n = 14, All hospice co-ordinators | Hospice – 14 hospices, 11 states | MDT (dietician, psychiatrist, PTs, OTs, pharmacists, admin) PPS | (i) better, compassionate relationships with staff; (ii) vital role, increased confidence & compassion; (iii) improved staff compassion, allowed compassion to be demonstrated by staff; (iv) made prison ‘decent’ and humane; (v) none discussed |
| 14 | Yampolskaya & Winston, | To identify components and outcomes of prison hospice programmes | Qualitative interviews & literature review | n = unknown 10 programmes | Hospice: multiple | MDT (Psychologist, psychiatrist) PPS (most prisons) CV (2 prisons) | (i) advantage to dying with familiar people and surroundings, ‘better’ pain management; (ii) transformative and rehabilitative; (iii) none discussed; (iv) prison & hospice goals different, but sends message that prisoners can die with dignity; (v) hypothetically cost-effective – reduced hospital visits, transport, medical and staff costs, and use of DNR orders. |
| 15 | Cichowlas & Chen, | Description of a hospice programme | Descriptive | n/a | Hospice, Dixon, Illinois | MDT ( | Successful overall: (i) none discussed; (ii) transformative; (iii) none discussed; (iv) hospice as more institution-centred than patient-centred; (v) no additional prison funding; do use an inmate benefit fund |
| 16 | Evans, Herzog, & Tillman, | To describe a prison hospice programme | Service description | n/a | Hospice – Louisiana, Angola | MDT; PPS | (i) peace of mind, but mistrust staff; (ii) increase self-confidence; (iii) rewarding work for programme staff; mixed prison staff support; (iv) improved public image; prisoners supportive; (v) No extra cost (believe saves money) – healthcare redeployed; fund-raisers, outside donations. |
| 17 | Head, 2005, USA | Commentary of hospice tour by hospice experts | Descriptive | n/a | Hospice, Louisiana, Angola | MDT, PPS | (i) less scared of dying alone and in pain; (ii) dedication and transformation; (iii) none discussed; (iv) less violent, more caring prison culture, “not plush by any stretch of the imagination” (p 357); (v) no additional costs |
| 18 | Linder, Knauf, Enders, & Meyers, | To describe a prison hospice | Descriptive | n/a | Hospice care, Vacaville, California | MDT ( | (i) described as providing for all needs, peaceful place to die; (ii) cornerstone, paying it forward, may be rehabilitative; (iii) prison staff difficulty reconciling security & care; (iv) hospice transformed from a ‘snake-pit’ to respectful environment to die; (v) none discussed |
| 19 | Ratcliff & Craig, | Description of the GRACE project | Descriptive | n/a | Hospice −4 states | MDT PPS in two sites | (i) positive impact, with ‘exceptional’ PPS support; (ii) transformative; (iii) increase in staff morale; (iv) decline in violence and litigation; (v) cost neutral, but lack of funds limited educational activities |
| 20 | Zimmermann, | To describe the development of a prison hospice | Descriptive | n/a | Hospice, Connecticut | MDT PPS CV | (i) positive impact; (ii) transformed, allowed to be compassionate; (iii,iv) none discussed; (v) cost neutral, potentially cheaper – transport, PPS & CV, DNR orders and redeployed staff; training by community hospice at no cost |
| (II) Structured programmes | |||||||
| 21 | Kopera-Frye et al., | To examine effects on prisoners, (veterans and non-veterans) | Cross-sectional standardised questionnaires | Prisoners | True Grit – a structured living programme | Community Volunteers & Psychologist | (i) Increase in prisoners’ self-reported physical & mental health, and satisfaction - no significant difference between veterans and non-veterans; (ii) not applicable; (iii) none discussed; (iv) supportive management; (v) no cost due to volunteers and donations from community organisations; believe better prisoner health will reduce costs |
| 22 | Harrison, | To describe a programme and its impact | Descriptive | n/a | True Grit – a structured living programme | Psychologist; CVs | (i) Reduced infirmary appointments, meds & fear of dying alone; increased wellbeing, activeness & hope; (ii) not applicable; (iii) none discussed; (iv) prison-more humane, management support, better held away from medical centre; (v) No funds – donations, volunteer labour. |
| 23 | Harrison & Benedetti, | Description of programme | Descriptive | n/a | True Grit – a structured living programme | Psychologist; CVs | (i) accomplishment and self-esteem, may aid health, reduction in infirmary visits and medications; (ii) not applicable; (iii) supportive; (iv) management supportive; (v) negligible – donations and volunteers |
| 24 | Hodel & Sánchez, | Description of programme content and delivery | Descriptive | n/a | Special Needs Program for Inmate-Patients with Dementia (SNPID) | MDT (healthcare, prison staff) PPS | (i) person with dementia can function in prison; quality of life increases, behavioural problems reduce; (ii) none discussed; (iii) work is rewarding for programme staff; (iv) important to adjust environment or provide specific units; (v) None discussed |
| (III) Personal care-focused programmes | |||||||
| 25 | Chow, | To describe the establishment of a programme | Descriptive | n/a | Nursing programme & Hospice – South Western State | Nurses; Hospice MDT; PPS | (i,ii,iii) none discussed; (iv) challenge in reconciling security and philosophy of care; (v) belief in ‘efficient and cost-effective nursing’. |
| 26 | Sannier, Danjour, & Talamon, | To describe a service adapted for older prisoners | Descriptive | n/a | In-cell care programme, Liancourt prison | Healthcare staff | (i) increased self-respect; (ii) not applicable; (iii) staff communication to broader medical team improved quality/timeliness of health intervention; consent issues re sharing information with staff; (iv,v) none discussed. |
| (IV) Regime & accommodation adaptation | |||||||
| 27 | Moll, | To identify and share good practice in treatment & management of prisoners with dementia | Qualitative | n = unknown (14 prisons) Prison staff, CVs, healthcare staff | Regime/accommodation adaptation, Structured programmes, Hospice: (UK = 8, USA = 4, Japan = 1, Belgium = 1) | Varied – MDT, PPS (in 10 prisons); CV | (i) prisoners’ improved mental/physical/social wellbeing at day centre & structured programme (True Grit); wing exercise & forums positive; strong PPS-prisoner relations and SNPID success; environmental change increase confidence/independence, reduce anxiety/confusion; (ii) none discussed; (iii) integration hampered by staff shortage, with PPS boosting capacity; dementia trained staff more confident; (iv) none discussed; (v) no costs presented, but specialist units and environmental change costly, voluntary sector input can be no cost or inexpensive |
| 28 | Hunsberger, | To describe the conversion of a mental hospital to a prison | Descriptive | n/a | Accommodation adaptation, Life Skills Program, Pennsylvania (Laurel Highland) | MDT | (i,ii) none discussed; (iii) third of prison staff are nurses so may aid the security-care conflict; (iv) management support, media attention: “a prison with compassion”; (v) $26 million conversion from mental health hospital to prison, but programme costs themselves not presented. |
| 29 | McCarthy & Rose, | Discussion of how States are addressing ageing prisoners | Descriptive | n/a | Regime & Accommodation adaptation, Hospice (8 states) | MDT PPS (hospice) | (i,ii,iii,iv) none discussed; (v) hope health care prison facilities will be cost-effective. Couple of prisons had similar or less costs for older prisoners than nursing homes; one hospice programme (Angola) had no extra costs; costs of specialist health unit beds in two prisons (inc Laurel Highland) were greater than for average prisoner beds. |
MDT = Social workers, nurses, doctors, chaplains and prison staff, all else listed are in addition to this core group; PPS = Prisoner Peer Supporters; CV = Community Volunteers
Quality appraisal of included papers
| Paper No | Author(s) | METHODOLOGICAL APPRAISAL SUMMARY | Quality Category | |
|---|---|---|---|---|
| Strengths | Limitations | |||
| 1 | Bronstein & Wright | Structured and full abstract, background and aims; inclusion of interview protocol; clear data collection process; some discussion of analytic process and triangulation; secured appropriate ethical approval; structured results section | Questionable methodological appropriateness | LOW |
| 2 | Cloyes, Rosenkranz, Wold, et al | Structured and full abstract, background and aims; full data analysis description; secured ethical permission and described informed consent process; clear presentation of results | Lack of explanation of method; patchy socio-demographics, although discussed; no reflections on researcher bias | HIGH |
| 3 | Cloyes, Rosenkranz, Berry et al | Structured and full abstract, background and aims; interviews recorded; fairly large sample size; full data analysis description, validation & triangulation; ethics approval; thorough results section | Lack of detail about interviews; no interviews with prisoner patients; no socio-demographic information; no description of informed consent process; assume programme is effective, no evidence presented; bias not discussed | MODERATE |
| 4 | Cloyes, Rosenkranz, Supiano, et al | Structured and full abstract, background and aims; taped interviews; method appropriate; quite large sample size; full data analysis description, validation & triangulation; ethics approval; full discussion of study implications | Lack of detail about the interviews; did not interview prisoner patients; no socio-demographic detail presented; bias not discussed; results about prisoner volunteers contained no detail from them and no quotes throughout; opinion presented as fact | MODERATE |
| 5 | Hoffman & Dickinson | Clear and informative abstract and introduction; sampling strategy detailed, and good size and breadth, with high response rate | Aims not wholly clear; methodology detail scant, esp. on surveys used; no socio-demographic, data analysis, ethics or bias information; findings lack clarity; opinions stated as fact | LOW |
| 6 | Loeb, Hollenbeak, et al | Structured and full abstract, background, aims, methods, sampling, data analysis and findings; presented discussion guide; thorough discussion of ethics and bias | Quite small sample size; interviews not taped but used quotes; prisoner patients not sampled | HIGH |
| 7 | Maull | Report of one of the first in-prison hospice programmes, which influenced their development across the USA. | Lack of evaluation detail in abstract, lack of evidence for background; lack of information on methods, sampling, analysis, ethics and bias, and few findings presented. | LOW |
| 8 | Maull | Fairly comprehensive background, guidelines resonate with later research, discussion of implications. | Lack of detail in abstract, literature review used only one database but information not synthesised, vague aim, inadequate method, sampling, data analysis, ethics & bias and findings. | LOW |
| 9 | Stone, Papadopoulos, et al | Clear abstract and aims and method guideline; value as first review of hospices published | Justification of UK–USA comparison weak; some background lacking; no quality appraisal; data sampling confusing; search strategy not exhaustive; data extraction unclear; triangulation unmentioned; unclear results; conclusions overstated | LOW |
| 10 | Supiano, Cloyes & Berry | Clear abstract and aims, full background, taped interviews, included interview guide, clear sampling, full data analysis description, socio-demographic and ethics information, clear results, discussion of limitations and transferability issues | Full confidentiality could not be guaranteed, was discussed as a limitation; hospice presented as ‘thriving’ with no evidence in support of that assertion, and ‘recent’ even though in existence for 16 years. | HIGH |
| 11 | Wion & Loeb | Clear abstract, methodological guidelines, quality appraisal & extraction method, as well as validation and triangulation; results detailed and easy to follow; discussed implications & limitations | Background brief, 6 research questions; searched 5 databases using 4 search terms only; author bias issue not fully justified; results not always well synthesised & very lengthy | MODERATE |
| 12 | Wright & Bronstein a | Structured and full abstract, background and aims; discussion of bias affecting result; ethics permission obtained; structured findings | Only sampled hospice leads; no information on interview guide topics; sampling strategy not apparently comprehensive; brief analysis, did not tape interviews; no informed consent discussion; results not always synthesised; extensive quotes used – but not verbatim transcripts; v similar to previous study | MODERATE |
| 13 | Wright & Bronstein b | Structured and full abstract, background and aims; discussion of bias affecting result; question used was presented; ethic approval granted | Only sampled hospice leads; lack of sampling and analysis detail; did not tape interviews but presented ‘quotes’; no informed consent process described; findings brief relative to Introduction; results not always synthesised; similar results to previous work | MODERATE |
| 14 | Yampolskaya & Winston | Fairly comprehensive abstract and background; attempt to contact ‘all’ prison hospices; findings have proved influential, especially the components identified | Some missing info from abstract, introduction lacked references; lack of methodological and sampling information; no socio-demographics; very basic analytic information, none on ethics nor bias; findings confused and lacked detail | LOW |
| 15 | Cichowlas & Chen | No methodology to appraise | LOW | |
| 16 | Evans, Herzog et al | No methodology to appraise | LOW | |
| 17 | Head, | No methodology to appraise | LOW | |
| 18 | Linder, Knauf et al | No methodology to appraise | LOW | |
| 19 | Ratcliff & Craig | No methodology to appraise | LOW | |
| 20 | Zimmermann | No methodology to appraise | LOW | |
| 21 | Kopera-Frye, Harrison, et al | Mostly full abstract, background and aims; good description of surveys (some standardised), data collection and sample with socio-demographics and response rate; ethics and informed consent discussed; detailed findings; sampled prisoners | Not all assertions for background were evidenced; some lack of data analysis detail in methods section, especially qualitative; no bias discussion; results not presented in easiest way to follow, especially qualitative | HIGH |
| 22 | Harrison, | No methodology to appraise | LOW | |
| 23 | Harrison & Benedetti | No methodology to appraise | LOW | |
| 24 | Hodel & Sanchez | No methodology to appraise | LOW | |
| 25 | Chow | No methodology to appraise | LOW | |
| 26 | Sannier, Danjour et al | No methodology to appraise | LOW | |
| 27 | Moll | Mostly full abstract, full background details on areas asked about in survey; some methodological and sample detail; detailed findings and recommendations | Lack of methodology detail, data collection, sampling strategy, and participant numbers; no prisoners sampled; analysis technique, informed consent & biases not presented; very difficult to follow findings which are mostly unsynthesised | MODERATE |
| 28 | Hunsberger | No methodology to appraise | LOW | |
| 29 | McCarthy & Rose | No methodology to appraise | LOW | |