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An optimal trauma-informed pathway for PTSD, complex PTSD and other mental health and psychosocial impacts of trauma in prisons: an expert consensus statement

Clare Crole-Rees Orcid Logo, Jack Tomlin, Natasha Kalebic, Sarah Argent, Claudia Berrington, Edward Chaplin, Jason Davies Orcid Logo, Matthew Hoskins, Lucie James, Manuela Jarrett, Oliver John, Lewis Jones, Radha Kothari, Imogen Kretzschmar, Deirdre MacManus, Michael Martin, Iain McKinnon, Gwen O'Connor, Madeline Petrillo, Marie Phillips, Rob Poole, Isidora Popovic, Alexander Simpson, Pamela Taylor, Sarah Wigham, Andrew Forrester

Psychology, Crime & Law

Swansea University Author: Jason Davies Orcid Logo

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Abstract

People in prisons have high levels of trauma exposure throughout their lives. Presentations are often complex, with a high prevalence of PTSD and CPTSD and other mental health comorbidities. Prisons themselves can be stressful and traumatising environments. There are challenges in the delivery of ef...

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Published in: Psychology, Crime & Law
ISSN: 1068-316X 1477-2744
Published: Taylor & Francis 2024
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URI: https://cronfa.swan.ac.uk/Record/cronfa67664
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spelling v2 67664 2024-09-12 An optimal trauma-informed pathway for PTSD, complex PTSD and other mental health and psychosocial impacts of trauma in prisons: an expert consensus statement b7dab4136f5c9c0614cda9bf2d5910b0 0000-0002-1694-5370 Jason Davies Jason Davies true false 2024-09-12 PSYS People in prisons have high levels of trauma exposure throughout their lives. Presentations are often complex, with a high prevalence of PTSD and CPTSD and other mental health comorbidities. Prisons themselves can be stressful and traumatising environments. There are challenges in the delivery of effective treatments for PTSD and CPTSD. There is a need for the development of effective clinical pathways for these conditions that are embedded within trauma-informed organisational approaches. Responding to this need, this report is the result of a multidisciplinary expert consensus meeting and review of the research literature on PTSD, CPTSD, associated comorbidities and optimal approaches to trauma-informed practice. The group consisted of 24 expert representatives from psychology, psychiatry, healthcare, academia, social care and Welsh Government. The meeting commenced with presentations on various aspects of the clinical pathway for PTSD and complex PTSD in prisons, and of applications of trauma-informed practice within prisons. Small sub-groups then provided practical recommendations and solutions relevant to their assigned topic. Findings were presented to all meeting attendees for another round of discussion and debate, until consensus was reached. The resulting recommendations provide guidance to improve identification, treatment and support for people living in prison who have experienced trauma. Journal Article Psychology, Crime &amp; Law 0 Taylor & Francis 1068-316X 1477-2744 Post-traumatic stress disorder, complex post-traumatic stress disorder, trauma-informed, prisons, clinical pathways 3 9 2024 2024-09-03 10.1080/1068316x.2024.2394807 COLLEGE NANME Psychology School COLLEGE CODE PSYS Swansea University Another institution paid the OA fee We thank the Offender Health Research Network Cymru (Cardiff University), Welsh Government and Traumatic Stress Wales 2024-10-24T15:44:17.8419236 2024-09-12T13:40:49.5540376 Faculty of Medicine, Health and Life Sciences School of Psychology Clare Crole-Rees 0000-0002-7068-9064 1 Jack Tomlin 2 Natasha Kalebic 3 Sarah Argent 4 Claudia Berrington 5 Edward Chaplin 6 Jason Davies 0000-0002-1694-5370 7 Matthew Hoskins 8 Lucie James 9 Manuela Jarrett 10 Oliver John 11 Lewis Jones 12 Radha Kothari 13 Imogen Kretzschmar 14 Deirdre MacManus 15 Michael Martin 16 Iain McKinnon 17 Gwen O'Connor 18 Madeline Petrillo 19 Marie Phillips 20 Rob Poole 21 Isidora Popovic 22 Alexander Simpson 23 Pamela Taylor 24 Sarah Wigham 25 Andrew Forrester 26 67664__31302__243bf03603a6491eaba936c84e56d38b.pdf 67664.VOR.pdf 2024-09-12T14:06:53.2963857 Output 1045891 application/pdf Version of Record true © 2024 The Author(s). This is an Open Access article distributed under the terms of the Creative Commons Attribution-NonCommercial-NoDerivatives License (CC-BY-NC-ND). true eng http://creativecommons.org/licenses/by-nc-nd/4.0/
title An optimal trauma-informed pathway for PTSD, complex PTSD and other mental health and psychosocial impacts of trauma in prisons: an expert consensus statement
spellingShingle An optimal trauma-informed pathway for PTSD, complex PTSD and other mental health and psychosocial impacts of trauma in prisons: an expert consensus statement
Jason Davies
title_short An optimal trauma-informed pathway for PTSD, complex PTSD and other mental health and psychosocial impacts of trauma in prisons: an expert consensus statement
title_full An optimal trauma-informed pathway for PTSD, complex PTSD and other mental health and psychosocial impacts of trauma in prisons: an expert consensus statement
title_fullStr An optimal trauma-informed pathway for PTSD, complex PTSD and other mental health and psychosocial impacts of trauma in prisons: an expert consensus statement
title_full_unstemmed An optimal trauma-informed pathway for PTSD, complex PTSD and other mental health and psychosocial impacts of trauma in prisons: an expert consensus statement
title_sort An optimal trauma-informed pathway for PTSD, complex PTSD and other mental health and psychosocial impacts of trauma in prisons: an expert consensus statement
author_id_str_mv b7dab4136f5c9c0614cda9bf2d5910b0
author_id_fullname_str_mv b7dab4136f5c9c0614cda9bf2d5910b0_***_Jason Davies
author Jason Davies
author2 Clare Crole-Rees
Jack Tomlin
Natasha Kalebic
Sarah Argent
Claudia Berrington
Edward Chaplin
Jason Davies
Matthew Hoskins
Lucie James
Manuela Jarrett
Oliver John
Lewis Jones
Radha Kothari
Imogen Kretzschmar
Deirdre MacManus
Michael Martin
Iain McKinnon
Gwen O'Connor
Madeline Petrillo
Marie Phillips
Rob Poole
Isidora Popovic
Alexander Simpson
Pamela Taylor
Sarah Wigham
Andrew Forrester
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container_title Psychology, Crime &amp; Law
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publishDate 2024
institution Swansea University
issn 1068-316X
1477-2744
doi_str_mv 10.1080/1068316x.2024.2394807
publisher Taylor & Francis
college_str Faculty of Medicine, Health and Life Sciences
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hierarchy_top_id facultyofmedicinehealthandlifesciences
hierarchy_top_title Faculty of Medicine, Health and Life Sciences
hierarchy_parent_id facultyofmedicinehealthandlifesciences
hierarchy_parent_title Faculty of Medicine, Health and Life Sciences
department_str School of Psychology{{{_:::_}}}Faculty of Medicine, Health and Life Sciences{{{_:::_}}}School of Psychology
document_store_str 1
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description People in prisons have high levels of trauma exposure throughout their lives. Presentations are often complex, with a high prevalence of PTSD and CPTSD and other mental health comorbidities. Prisons themselves can be stressful and traumatising environments. There are challenges in the delivery of effective treatments for PTSD and CPTSD. There is a need for the development of effective clinical pathways for these conditions that are embedded within trauma-informed organisational approaches. Responding to this need, this report is the result of a multidisciplinary expert consensus meeting and review of the research literature on PTSD, CPTSD, associated comorbidities and optimal approaches to trauma-informed practice. The group consisted of 24 expert representatives from psychology, psychiatry, healthcare, academia, social care and Welsh Government. The meeting commenced with presentations on various aspects of the clinical pathway for PTSD and complex PTSD in prisons, and of applications of trauma-informed practice within prisons. Small sub-groups then provided practical recommendations and solutions relevant to their assigned topic. Findings were presented to all meeting attendees for another round of discussion and debate, until consensus was reached. The resulting recommendations provide guidance to improve identification, treatment and support for people living in prison who have experienced trauma.
published_date 2024-09-03T15:44:15Z
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