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    Breaking barriers and building connections

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    Author
    Travers, Raymond F.
    Keyword
    Personality disorders
    Mentally ill offenders
    Prisons
    Organisation and administration
    Date
    2005
    
    Metadata
    Show full item record
    DOI
    10.1080/17449200600572290
    Publisher's URL
    http://www.emeraldinsight.com/doi/pdfplus/10.1080/17449200600572290
    Abstract
    The Primrose Project has been developed, as part of the Dangerous People with Severe Personality Disorder (DSPD) programme in England and Wales, to specifically address the complex needs of women prisoners who pose a significant danger to the public. It has been recognised that the needs of these women prisoners may differ from those of men in the DSPD programme. The Primrose project therefore aims to deliver more effective prison-based healthcare interventions to these dangerous women prisoners to reduce risk to self and others. The Primrose Project expects to initially support up to 12 women prisoners in HMP Low Newton, Durham. These women prisoners will be placed with other 'non-DSPD' women prisoners in the prison and will receive a variety of therapeutic interventions. Overall, the Primrose Project aims to develop into a comprehensive assessment, treatment and management facility and the proposed evaluation aims to facilitate this development. The evaluation will look at the project as a whole, identifying strengths and limitations to overall improve the service for these women prisoners, who have not previously been provided for. The research is based on a list of comprehensive questions, which form the basis of evaluation of the existing four male DSPD sites in England and Wales, which will prove useful when comparisons are later made with the Primrose Project. © 2005 Taylor & Francis.
    Citation
    Travers, R. F. & Reeves, S. (2005). Breaking barriers and building connections. International Journal of Prisoner Health, 1 (2-4), pp.199-205.
    Type
    Article
    URI
    http://hdl.handle.net/20.500.12904/9463
    Collections
    Personality Disorders
    Prisons
    Prisons

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