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    Stories and stats: a mixed methods study of staff and male prisoner patient experiences of prison based mental health services

    142286_Hancock2009.pdf (2.036Mb)
    Access Status
    Open access
    Authors
    Hancock, Kate
    Date
    2009
    Supervisor
    Assoc. Prof. Angela Fielding
    Type
    Thesis
    Award
    PhD
    
    Metadata
    Show full item record
    School
    School of Occupational Therapy and Social Work. Faculty of Health Sciences
    URI
    http://hdl.handle.net/20.500.11937/180
    Collection
    • Curtin Theses
    Abstract

    One consequence of the deinstitutionalisation of psychiatric care and increase in community care is the rising number of mentally ill people in prison populations where there are insufficient mental health professionals and services to address the treatment and rehabilitation needs of psychiatrically unwell prisoner patients. People with mental illness are over-represented in prison populations, and the provision of mental health services is a difficult task in an environment where discipline and safety take precedence over health treatment. This research investigated attitudes, perceptions, and experiences of prisoners, health professionals, and correctional staff in relation to mental illness and mental health service provison across eight prisons in Western Australia. The research aimed to gain a deeper understanding of experiences within prisons. Perceptions, attitudes and experiences of participants were explored using a mixed methods approach; both qualitative and quantitative methods were employed to gather information in a ‘two phase sequential design’ (QUAL/QUAN) (Creswell and Plano Clark 2007). The Phase One key informant interviews (n=17), and the key themes identified in the literature review, informed the development of the Phase Two quantitative survey questionnaires (n=168). These Phases acted as two different ways of exploring the research questions.One consequence of the deinstitutionalisation of psychiatric care and increase in community care is the rising number of mentally ill people in prison populations where there are insufficient mental health professionals and services to address the treatment and rehabilitation needs of psychiatrically unwell prisoner patients. People with mental illness are over-represented in prison populations, and the provision of mental health services is a difficult task in an environment where discipline and safety take precedence over health treatment. This research investigated attitudes, perceptions, and experiences of prisoners, health professionals, and correctional staff in relation to mental illness and mental health service provison across eight prisons in Western Australia. The research aimed to gain a deeper understanding of experiences within prisons. Perceptions, attitudes and experiences of participants were explored using a mixed methods approach; both qualitative and quantitative methods were employed to gather information in a ‘two phase sequential design’ (QUAL/QUAN) (Creswell and Plano Clark 2007). The Phase One key informant interviews (n=17), and the key themes identified in the literature review, informed the development of the Phase Two quantitative survey questionnaires (n=168). These Phases acted as two different ways of exploring the research questions.

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