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Feminism: Sex and gender discussions

Female prisoners in England left to give birth alone in their cells

204 replies

hackmum · 13/11/2018 08:13

www.theguardian.com/society/2018/nov/13/female-prisoners-in-england-left-to-give-birth-alone-in-their-cells-report-reveals

I feel increasingly despondent about the way inmates are treated in women's prisons. Not only is it now apparently acceptable to shove a male rapist in with a bunch of vulnerable women, there is a lack of basic care for pregnant women. In my view, pregnant women shouldn't be in prison in the first place, unless they've done something very seriously wrong, which the vast majority haven't.

This particular report highlights the fact that some female prisoners have been left to give birth alone in their cells. It's a depressing read.

OP posts:
Weetabixandshreddies · 13/11/2018 14:37

I've just read that newspaper article. Tbh, and I understand that It's terrifying for the women concerned, a lot of what the woman describes happens to pregnant women outside of prison too.

I know of several women who were told that they weren't in labour or who were turned away from the hospital for not being in established labour. All went on to deliver at home, on their own before help could get to them. I think this is symptomatic of some healthcare today. They are under too much pressure and too busy to assess people properly and to give patients the time that they need. All women, prisoners or not, should be entitled to good maternity care.

SaskiaRembrandtWasFramed · 13/11/2018 14:39

Weetabixandshreddies Tue 13-Nov-18 14:26:23
It is shocking! I'm finding it very hard to get my head around the idea that newborn babies are effectively being punished because of who their mothers are.
But you also can't allow women to use being pregnant as quite literally a "get out of jail free" card. It could be argued that it was actually the mother who put her unborn child in danger by getting sent to prison.

Where did I suggest that pregnant women shouldn't be sent to prison? I was commenting on the lack of basic medical care for their babies, who have not committed any crime. Regardless of who their mothers are or what crimes they may have committed, in the UK babies are entitled to the same level of ante and post natal care that any other newborn would be. We don't punish children for the crimes of their parents.

daisy877 · 13/11/2018 14:40

@53rdWay I understand what but then what happens when the baby is 18months does it then get taken from it mother and then but into care ? To me that makes no sense. Also what is the mother is in the there for life ? What's the point of bonding then taking the baby away

arranfan · 13/11/2018 14:41

Women in Prison has these key facts about mothers and children:

Imprisoned mothers and their children

Only 9% of children whose mothers are in prison are cared for by their fathers in their mothers' absence.

At least a fifth of women prisoners are lone parents before imprisonment, compared to 9% of the general population.

Only half of the women who had lived with or were in contact with their children prior to imprisonment had received a visit since going to prison.

Maintaining contact with children is made more difficult by the distance that many prisoners are held from their home area. This is particularly acute for women given the limited number of women’s prisons; their average distance from home is 66 miles.

One Home Office study showed that for 85% of mothers, prison was the first time they had been separated from their children for any significant length of time.

Imprisoning mothers for non-violent offences has a damaging impact on children and carries a cost to the state of more than £17 million over a ten year period.

www.womeninprison.org.uk/research/key-facts.php

53rdWay · 13/11/2018 14:42

Most mothers are in there for short sentences in the first place daisy which is why things like M&B units exist. A woman serving life in prison isn’t going to be able to keep her baby anyway.

SaskiaRembrandtWasFramed · 13/11/2018 14:44

silentcrow I suspect it's also a horrendous liability for insurance purposes - where does the buck stop when a woman or her child dies? Or if the child is disabled in some way which is attributable to prison life?

It must be a case of if not when that happens. The breech birth described in the article had the potential to go horrifically wrong. If it was the case that a child ended up with otherwise preventable disabilities because of the negligence of the prison service they would surely have a case to sue.

RedToothBrush · 13/11/2018 14:45

Why are the medical staff who are employed in prison not trained to be able to cope with maternity problems and issues?

Why if there is captive female population of a large number - which you are responsible for, and are particularly vulnerable, and aren't screened for pregnancy and have a abnormally rate of mental health issues and complex health needs which are not representative of the population as a whole - is this not standard?

Why is there a distinct lack of data in this area?

Why is this not publically available information as its important for the provision and planning of services and support for female prisoners?

Why is there insufficient support in prison for mothers and babies?

Why isn't there better long term better strategic planning for those children, who are far more likely to end up in the care system and then the prison system themselves?

Why?

Is it because our thought process when it comes to women prisoners is idiotic, short termist, chronically underfunded and fundamentally flawed?

hackmum · 13/11/2018 14:46

Weetabix: "I know of several women who were told that they weren't in labour or who were turned away from the hospital for not being in established labour."

I've come across that too. In fact, the Guardian did quite a big piece on it a few months ago:

www.theguardian.com/lifeandstyle/2018/jan/15/i-knew-i-was-in-labour-why-are-women-being-turned-away-from-hospital-during-childbirth

Midwives tend to believe that they recognise the signs of labour by how much noise a woman is making, or whether she's showing obvious distress - but in fact, not all women behave the same way in labour, and labour can progress at different speeds. It must have been so frightening for a woman in prison to be disbelieved in this way.

OP posts:
Weetabixandshreddies · 13/11/2018 14:47

Saskia no not aimed at you. Aimed at the OP who wrote

pregnant women shouldn't be in prison in the first place, unless they've done something very seriously wrong, which the vast majority haven't.

I don't agree that pregnant women shouldn't be in prison. If the crime that they have committed carries a prison sentence then they should have to serve that sentence.

Weetabixandshreddies · 13/11/2018 14:52

We don't punish children for the crimes of their parents.
And no we shouldn't punish children for their parent's crime but what do you suggest? A pregnant woman is sentenced to prison - do you keep her out until the baby is born?

Arguably a child whose dad is in prison is also being punished, or a baby whose mother serves longer than the 18 months that she can keep the child with her for.

What is the answer? Yes of course there should be adequate medical care. But I don't see the argument for treating criminals more leniently just because they are pregnant.

SaskiaRembrandtWasFramed · 13/11/2018 14:52

Good questions, RedToothBrush, and I think the answer to your final one is a resounding yes.

It does that some people are failed literally from birth, and little is being done to ameliorate that that situation.

Weetabixandshreddies · 13/11/2018 14:54

It must have been so frightening for a woman in prison to be disbelieved in this way.
It's frightening for any woman to be disbelieved in that way.

SaskiaRembrandtWasFramed · 13/11/2018 14:57

And no we shouldn't punish children for their parent's crime but what do you suggest? A pregnant woman is sentenced to prison - do you keep her out until the baby is born?

I suggest providing her and her baby with the same level of healthcare that every other British citizen receives.

Once again: I have not said she should not be in prison (although I do think sentencing should be looked at for prisoners of both sexes because I can see the merits of the argument for alternative sentences for non-violent offenders).

You seem to be arguing with something I haven't actually said.

hackmum · 13/11/2018 14:57

Weetabix: "I don't agree that pregnant women shouldn't be in prison. If the crime that they have committed carries a prison sentence then they should have to serve that sentence."

The evidence is that women tend to be given harsher sentences than men for the same crime.

There is also the question of mitigating circumstances, of course. Suppose a woman is caught shoplifting multiple times. A lot of people think she should have a prison sentence. But suppose the reason she is shoplifting is because her partner takes all her benefit money and doesn't allow her any, and she's shoplifting to feed herself and her children? (This is an example I've seen Corston give elsewhere.) Suppose she has severe mental health problems, or is addicted to hard drugs? What purpose is served by sending her to prison?

OP posts:
SaskiaRembrandtWasFramed · 13/11/2018 15:04

To be honest, I don't see the point of sending anyone to prison for shoplifting. Firstly, they're hardly a danger to society, and secondly, I'd hazard a guess that they need help (with a drug problem, with money problems, with mental health problems) rather than locking up.

Wrathofjurgenklop · 13/11/2018 15:08

Or if they are not a danger to society, they could have alternative deferred sentencing, or better access to baby units.
Whatever
But we should not treat pregnant women like the male prisoners.
We cannot allow male criminals to abuse the situation by using women to front their crimes knowing they are, could be, or will be pregnant.

This is such an emotive subject, I naively thought there were enough special baby units available.

At least the media watches MN for stories, they might pick up on this one.

Choochoothepanda · 13/11/2018 15:10

Suppose she has severe mental health problems, or is addicted to hard drugs? What purpose is served by sending her to prison?

That would be most of the prison estate, male and female.

Ultimately prison is there as a punishment. The vast majority of society want it to be there. I don't think it's as simple as violent vs non violent offences. Burglary is a non violent offence, most of the population would want to see burglars jailed (male or female)

Prison doesn't work for rehabilitation, most know that. But at the very least it's an embuggarence for criminals and gives society a break from them, even if only for a short time. I honestly cannot see any reason (parenthood or not) not to jail criminals whatever their sex

UpstartCrow · 13/11/2018 15:14

What if they didn't pay their Council Tax or TV Licence, or stole food to feed their kids? Thats the level of crime we are talking about for women.

Choochoothepanda · 13/11/2018 15:15

To be honest, I don't see the point of sending anyone to prison for shoplifting. Firstly, they're hardly a danger to society, and secondly, I'd hazard a guess that they need help (with a drug problem, with money problems, with mental health problems) rather than locking up.

I'd agree with you if people were being jailed for first offences, but they're really not. Cautions come first, then rehabilitation orders, drug/alcohol orders, community orders. How much help do you think the CJS needs to give people before finally saying "you've had your chance"? You can't force people to comply with drug rehab, you can eventually force them into prison.

Choochoothepanda · 13/11/2018 15:17

What if they didn't pay their Council Tax or TV Licence, or stole food to feed their kids? Thats the level of crime we are talking about for women.

But they're not getting jailed for that. Not as a first offence, otherwise I'd be on board. That would be outrageous

ScreamingValenta · 13/11/2018 15:24

The evidence is that women tend to be given harsher sentences than men for the same crime.

Should we not then be calling for a review of sentencing for all women, not just pregnant women?

arranfan · 13/11/2018 15:26

Should we not then be calling for a review of sentencing for all women, not just pregnant women?

It's one of the reasons that a Mumsnet web chat with appropriate organisations and speakers would be so useful. I'd like to hear the arguments for a full scale reform of the criminal justice system and what it would look like.

RedToothBrush · 13/11/2018 15:29

One of the things that struck me with the situation with the woman I knew who was pregnant in prison was how difficult she found it to get access to any medical care.

I knew her well and I am not going to argue in her case about whether she should have been in prison. I know the ins and outs of her situation, and yeah, she was overdue a prison visit. She had been about, and was in her late 30s. She was tough as old boots and never afraid to be pushy. She was from a good supportive extended family though she had some immediate family problems.

But things in prison were tough and even she struggled. She'd be someone I'd have said would have coped well.

I can not imagine what that means for a less confidence or less street wise 18 or 19 year old, from a difficult family background and no support on the outside or long term once they get out.

She couldn't just ask for a pregnancy test, or to see a doctor. The protocol it took to do that and the pressure from prison officers and other prisoners not to put your head above the parapet to get the help you needed was intense. You are taught to put your head down, and shut up and not make a fuss.

That needs to be kept in context. If she had been offered health care appointments as standard as part of routine - eg: a pregnancy test on arrival, or a daily/weekly routine it would help normalise health care.

The mental health problems of prisoners in general are huge. We don't have good services outside prison. Pregnancy is seen as a good time to intervene in all sort of wider health and social issues because women are in contact with service providers. Yet prison isn't seen in this context or this way. Yes its about punishment. But if society wants to reduce its problems (and expenses) it has to start seeing prison as more than a holding cell for difficult people who we'd rather forget or wished were invisible.

Health care should not be an after thought for people in prison. It should be THE priority. Other things relating to life outside and freedom are the things that should go.

These are people who have slipped through the cracks of society previously. Its an opportunity to reverse that but we don't view it in that way. Why not?

Why is health in prison, seen as a something thats low priority and more of a privilege than a basic right and building block for a better life situation?

Mc180768 · 13/11/2018 15:31

Because I don't know how to post links - Society.org has some research called: Lost Spaces: Is the current procedure for women prisoners to gain a place in a prison MBU fair & accessible' is well worth a read.

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