Engaging the hospice community in end-of-life care in prisons (Part 2)
Engaging the hospice community in end-of-life care in prisons (Part 2)
ehospice; by Barry R. Ashpole; 1/21/25
Part 1 offered a broad overview of the potential role community hospices can play to improve end-of-life care (EoLC) for a particularly vulnerable and underserved population. As has been widely acknowledged, prisons and correctional facilities are caught between the proverbial “rock and a hard place,” between issues of security and public safety and the civil rights of the prison inmates to healthcare comparable to what is available to the populace-at-large. Part 2 takes a closer look at specific initiatives by some community hospices to support prison inmates towards the end of life. Prior to conducting research for its 2020 report, ‘Dying Behind Bars: How can we better support people in prison at the end-of-life,’ Hospice UK had only anecdotal evidence of the important work that some hospices were engaged in to support prison inmates at the end of life. The scope of this support had not been established at a national level. After conducting a survey of hospice services across England, researchers found that 25 hospices – representing approximately 15% of hospices in the country – are indeed providing this care and support, working with 34 different prisons.
Publisher's note: Also see: Engaging the hospice community in end-of-life care in prisons (Part 1) that was also discussed in Hospice News' Global challenges persist in bringing hospice care to incarcerated populations.