A groundbreaking new analysis reveals a striking disparity in the quality of healthcare experienced by prisoners in England compared to the general population. Based on an extensive retrospective review of medical records from 18 prisons, published in BMJ Quality & Safety, researchers have estimated that incarcerated individuals face an alarming 41 to 67-fold higher risk of encountering avoidable healthcare-associated harms. This study shines a critical light on systemic healthcare deficiencies within prison environments, underscoring an urgent public health crisis demanding focused policy intervention.
In 2024, approximately 98,000 individuals were held across prisons and youth offender detention centers throughout England and Wales. The research team extrapolates from their detailed review that between 3,000 and 3,700 cases of preventable harm related to healthcare failures could arise annually within this population alone. These numbers reveal a stark contrast to healthcare safety benchmarks observed among the general public, highlighting entrenched inequities in care provision behind bars.
The Department of Health and Social Care’s 2006 initiative to integrate prison healthcare provision with the National Health Service was intended to ensure prisoners receive staff, resources, and facilities on par with community standards. Despite this policy commitment, structural challenges have impeded its realization. Chronic overcrowding, shortages of qualified healthcare workers, and rising incidences of self-harm and substance misuse collectively exacerbate the risk landscape, complicating efforts to deliver safe and effective medical care to incarcerated patients.
To gain a representative overview of healthcare harms across varied carceral settings, researchers analyzed over 15,000 medical records, culminating in a focused cohort of 7,147 prisoners. This included a deliberately selected ‘enhanced risk’ group with multiple long-term health conditions and a randomized control group. The methodological rigor was designed to capture healthcare-related adverse events systematically over the preceding 12-month period, enabling a comprehensive assessment of patient safety within custodial environments.
The review identified 247 avoidable harm incidents affecting 244 prisoners, with many events involving substantial physical discomfort and pain. Delays in receiving appropriate healthcare interventions were also prevalent, alongside the frequent deterioration of chronic medical conditions. Such findings suggest entrenched gaps not only in acute care response but also in the longitudinal management of complex health needs, which may compound morbidity among incarcerated individuals.
Significantly, 209 of these incidents resulted in moderate to severe harm or death, with a majority deemed probably or possibly avoidable. Disturbingly, eight cases were identified as definitely avoidable, indicating clear lapses in clinical care standards. Among the fatal outcomes, 27 deaths were directly attributed to these healthcare safety failures, illustrating the lethal consequences when correctional healthcare systems falter.
Illustrative examples within the study underscore systemic failings. In one tragic case, a prisoner who explicitly voiced suicidal intent upon arrival was neither promptly referred to mental health specialists nor placed under an appropriate care plan. Subsequently isolated in a segregation unit without adequate observation, the individual died by suicide. Another case involved advanced cancer being missed despite persistent symptoms, with healthcare providers misattributing the patient’s complaints to drug-seeking behavior. The disease progression necessitated emergency surgery and prolonged intensive care, reflecting catastrophic diagnostic delays.
Quantifying the scope of harm, the researchers estimate a maximum incidence rate of 3,412 avoidable harm events per 100,000 prisoner-years. Put simply, this equates to approximately 34 out of every 1,000 prisoners experiencing preventable harm annually. These findings illustrate an urgent need to address the conditions and protocols surrounding healthcare delivery in secure settings to mitigate the disproportionate burden of medical adversity borne by this vulnerable population.
While the observational nature of the study precludes definitive conclusions about causality, the authors emphasize gaps in health record completeness and documentation quality may understate the scale of the problem. Nevertheless, the compelling associations warrant immediate attention to enhance healthcare management, particularly for prisoners with chronic illnesses and those at high risk for self-harm, whose needs are often complex and multifaceted.
The study advocates for systemic improvements rather than exceptional or preferential treatment for incarcerated individuals. Enhancing prison healthcare quality is framed as an essential step toward reducing deep-seated health disparities experienced by a population with pronounced healthcare vulnerabilities. This perspective challenges policymakers to recognize healthcare equity as a fundamental human right irrespective of custodial status and to implement pragmatic reforms correspondingly.
The researchers call on government authorities and stakeholders to confront the systemic failures that perpetuate avoidable harm in prison healthcare. They emphasize that delivering equitable, safe healthcare within secure environments is a major ongoing challenge that requires urgent, focused intervention. Without decisive action, the prison population’s healthcare inequities will persist, with grave implications for public health and human rights.
In conclusion, this study serves as a clarion call to prioritize comprehensive healthcare reform within the prison system. By aligning resources, staff training, care protocols, and oversight mechanisms with community standards, the health outcomes of incarcerated persons can improve significantly. Addressing these deep-rooted challenges is critical to safeguarding health, dignity, and justice for one of society’s most marginalized groups.
Subject of Research: People
Article Title: The incidence of avoidable healthcare-associated harm in prisons in England: a retrospective case note review
News Publication Date: 7-May-2026
Web References: DOI: 10.1136/bmjqs-2025-019935
References: BMJ Quality & Safety journal article
Keywords: Imprisonment, Healthcare, Health disparity

