Summary
The Department of Health and Social Care has published a letter, final report with recommendations, and a proposed code of practice framework from Baroness Hollins on the use of long-term segregation for people with a learning disability and/or autistic people.
In her scathing report, Baroness Shelia Hollins said: “My heart breaks that after such a long period of work, the care and outcomes for people with a learning disability and autistic people are still so poor, and the very initiatives which are improving their situations are yet to secure the essential funding required to continue this important work."
Content
The report focuses on people with a learning disability and/or autistic people who are detained in mental health and specialist learning disability hospitals.
The Independent Care (Education) and Treatment Review (IC(E)TR) programme reviewed the care and treatment of 191 people who were detained in long-term segregation between November 2019 and March 2023. The programme was established because of serious concerns about the use of long-term segregation, and in particular about lengthy stays and difficulties in discharging people from long-term segregation. The aim was to identify the blocks to discharge and to assess whether independently chaired Care (Education) and Treatment Reviews (C(E)TRs) would be more effective than commissioner chaired C(E)TRs in developing the right support for each person detained in long-term segregation.
The Oversight Panel found a lack of urgency in addressing the many systemic issues that were identified through the IC(E)TR reviews.
International consensus across various sectors and disciplines on the harms caused by enforced isolation are scientifically evidenced and compelling, and the consensus is that enforced isolation has no therapeutic benefit.
Members are unanimous in recommending that all instances of enforced social isolation, including seclusion and long-term segregation, should be renamed ‘solitary confinement’. The panel recommends that its use with children and young people under the age of 18 should be ended with immediate effect, and that the use of solitary confinement for people with a learning disability and/or autistic people should be severely curtailed and time limited. Minimum standards for the use of solitary confinement should be introduced urgently through amendments to the Mental Health Act 1983: Code of Practice.
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