Far from Home: Women’s Experiences of Being in Secure Forensic Inpatient Services

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Far from Home: Women’s Experiences of Being in Secure Forensic Inpatient Services. / Swales, Michaela; Galway, Róisín; Wane, Julia.
In: Women and Criminal Justice, 02.02.2024.

Research output: Contribution to journalArticlepeer-review

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Swales M, Galway R, Wane J. Far from Home: Women’s Experiences of Being in Secure Forensic Inpatient Services. Women and Criminal Justice. 2024 Feb 2. Epub 2024 Feb 2. doi: 10.1080/08974454.2024.2307878

Author

Swales, Michaela ; Galway, Róisín ; Wane, Julia. / Far from Home: Women’s Experiences of Being in Secure Forensic Inpatient Services. In: Women and Criminal Justice. 2024.

RIS

TY - JOUR

T1 - Far from Home: Women’s Experiences of Being in Secure Forensic Inpatient Services

AU - Swales, Michaela

AU - Galway, Róisín

AU - Wane, Julia

N1 - No DOA but added too late to save

PY - 2024/2/2

Y1 - 2024/2/2

N2 - Specialist secure mental health inpatient service provision for women in England and Wales is limited, and beds are often commissioned in out-of-area services to meet their mental health and risk management needs. In North Wales, there are no NHS beds for women at any secure level, and most women are placed out-of-area in South Wales or England. The current study aimed to explore the experiences of women from North Wales who had resided in out-of-area secure inpatient services, using Interpretative Phenomenological Analysis (IPA) methodology. Participants described the challenges that they and their families experienced when in services at a great distance from their home areas. Services responded to women’s expressions of distress with restrictive interventions, including physical restraint and seclusion, exacerbating their sense of isolation. Participants voiced a desire to return home and viewed returning to Wales as indicative of progress they had made. This is thought to be the first study involving women from across the secure pathway, from high secure to the community. The findings are explored in relation to existing literature and study limitations are discussed.

AB - Specialist secure mental health inpatient service provision for women in England and Wales is limited, and beds are often commissioned in out-of-area services to meet their mental health and risk management needs. In North Wales, there are no NHS beds for women at any secure level, and most women are placed out-of-area in South Wales or England. The current study aimed to explore the experiences of women from North Wales who had resided in out-of-area secure inpatient services, using Interpretative Phenomenological Analysis (IPA) methodology. Participants described the challenges that they and their families experienced when in services at a great distance from their home areas. Services responded to women’s expressions of distress with restrictive interventions, including physical restraint and seclusion, exacerbating their sense of isolation. Participants voiced a desire to return home and viewed returning to Wales as indicative of progress they had made. This is thought to be the first study involving women from across the secure pathway, from high secure to the community. The findings are explored in relation to existing literature and study limitations are discussed.

U2 - 10.1080/08974454.2024.2307878

DO - 10.1080/08974454.2024.2307878

M3 - Article

JO - Women and Criminal Justice

JF - Women and Criminal Justice

SN - 0897-4454

ER -