Archived: Prison Healthcare - HMP Isle of Wight

Management Offices, Inpatient Healthcare Unit, HMP Isle of Wight, Albany Site, Parkhurst Road, Newport, Isle of Wight, PO30 5RS (01983) 556733

Provided and run by:
Isle of Wight NHS Trust

Important: This service was previously managed by a different provider - see old profile
Important: This service is now managed by a different provider - see new profile

All Inspections

23 May 2012

During a routine inspection

This inspection concerns the physical and mental health services at The Isle of Wight prison.

HMP Isle of Wight was officially launched on 1 April 2009 and is the organisational amalgamation of the former HMP's Albany, Camp Hill, and Parkhurst. The prison holds approximately 1700 prisoners on the three sites with a central administration.

Camp Hill is a closed category C training prison holding adult men on short, medium and long term sentences.

Parkhurst is a category B training prison for adult male prisoners, and also holds a small number of un-convicted adult male prisoners awaiting trial at courts on the Isle of Wight.

Albany is a category B training prison.

The inspection was conducted jointly with staff from Her Majesty's Inspectorate of Prisons (HMIP). Prisoners were spoken to individually, in small groups whilst waiting at the health centres and in larger formal groups that covered the full range of prison life including healthcare.

There was considerable praise for the mental health services. Prisoners commented that they had received swift treatment when they had begun to self harm. There was a small number of adverse comments about the time taken to access mental health services.

There were mixed views on the provision of physical health.

A number of prisoners complained that the waiting time to see a doctor was too long, they said between two weeks and three months. Some said that the appointments' system was unreliable. Prisoners were sometimes not taken to appointments, where an escort was required, or sometimes they did not receive appointment slips.

Other prisoners had nothing but praise for the healthcare on offer with comments like 'the best I have ever seen' and 'they have got it right' being the norm.