Children in detention need better healthcare, including once they are released, because of their ongoing and complex needs, a new Curtin University study has found.
Researchers from Murdoch Children’s Research Institute, the Justice Health Group at Curtin University and the François-Xavier Bagnoud Centre for Health and Human Rights at Harvard University wrote a report that shines a light on one of the most neglected areas in the protection of children.
Children in detention typically have health problems that precede and are further compounded by their experiences in detention. These children have high rates of mental illness, trauma, high risk substance use, chronic disease, and neurodevelopmental disability.
The researchers called for unambiguous, global minimum healthcare standards for children in detention and for the development of workable mechanisms to routinely monitor and report on health services in places where they are deprived of liberty.
The report, Ensuring the highest attainable standard of health for children deprived of their liberty, spans children in the justice system and institutions, children living in prisons with their primary caregiver, migration-related detention and those detained in armed conflict and on national security grounds.
MCRI and Curtin University Professor Stuart Kinner said children who experience deprivation of liberty typically have health problems that precede and were further compounded by their experiences in detention.
“With more than seven million children experiencing deprivation of liberty globally each year, the health of these children is important in reducing health inequalities,” he said.
“Despite this, remarkably little is known about either the health status of children deprived of liberty or the health services available to them in detention and once they are back in the community. The available evidence suggests that health services in places of detention are often inadequate.”
Professor Kinner said children in detention have a high prevalence of complex, co-occurring health needs, including high rates of mental illness, trauma, high risk substance use, chronic disease and neurodevelopmental disability that required coordinated, high-quality healthcare.
Research from Australia has also reported that children released from criminal justice detention were at increased risk of preventable death.
“Emerging evidence of very poor health outcomes after deprivation of liberty suggests that in addition to ongoing efforts to prevent detention, more should be done to improve the health of these children while detained and after they return to the community,” Professor Kinner said.
“Setting minimum standards for healthcare in detention will help drive improvements in the quality of care and health outcomes. Developing mechanisms to routinely monitor and report on the health status and health services in places where children are deprived of liberty would also drive reform.”
The aim of the report is to identify gaps in the system and assist the United Nations Task Force in its efforts to support the implementation of the UN Convention on the Rights of the Child and ensure that all children, including those deprived of their liberty in all settings, achieve the highest attainable standard of health.