La fin de vie des patients détenus

The French Law of 4 March 2002 permits seriously ill or dying inmates to obtain suspended sentences. This kind of “compassionate release” entitles French prisoners to request release if they are very ill while incarcerated. Inmates are not always able to obtain release on compassionate grounds. Most...

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Main Authors: Aline Chassagne, Aurélie Godard-Marceau, Régis Aubry
Format: Article
Language:fra
Published: Association Anthropologie Médicale Appliquée au Développement et à la Santé 2017-03-01
Series:Anthropologie & Santé
Subjects:
Online Access:http://journals.openedition.org/anthropologiesante/2441
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spelling doaj-0a5a609c231f47adb7913f6bf75566fe2020-11-24T21:36:28ZfraAssociation Anthropologie Médicale Appliquée au Développement et à la SantéAnthropologie & Santé2111-50282017-03-011510.4000/anthropologiesante.2441La fin de vie des patients détenusAline ChassagneAurélie Godard-MarceauRégis AubryThe French Law of 4 March 2002 permits seriously ill or dying inmates to obtain suspended sentences. This kind of “compassionate release” entitles French prisoners to request release if they are very ill while incarcerated. Inmates are not always able to obtain release on compassionate grounds. Most dying inmates are hospitalized in secure inpatient care units called “UHSI”, often for several weeks, sometimes until death. The purpose of this article is to highlight the realities regarding inmates at the end of life putting in perspective the points of views of the sick prisoners with those of the health and correctional professionals accompanying them. On the basis of a qualitative research, the challenge is to highlight several difficulties in providing adequate palliative care in UHSI for inmates. First, the spatial constraints of this unit limit relationships between caregivers, inmates and families. Second, the end of life trajectory of those inmates is characterized by complex decision making, with an uncertain temporality of death and an uncertain possibility of obtaining compassionate release.http://journals.openedition.org/anthropologiesante/2441end of life (EOL)patient inmateFranceUHSIpalliative careuncertainty
collection DOAJ
language fra
format Article
sources DOAJ
author Aline Chassagne
Aurélie Godard-Marceau
Régis Aubry
spellingShingle Aline Chassagne
Aurélie Godard-Marceau
Régis Aubry
La fin de vie des patients détenus
Anthropologie & Santé
end of life (EOL)
patient inmate
France
UHSI
palliative care
uncertainty
author_facet Aline Chassagne
Aurélie Godard-Marceau
Régis Aubry
author_sort Aline Chassagne
title La fin de vie des patients détenus
title_short La fin de vie des patients détenus
title_full La fin de vie des patients détenus
title_fullStr La fin de vie des patients détenus
title_full_unstemmed La fin de vie des patients détenus
title_sort la fin de vie des patients détenus
publisher Association Anthropologie Médicale Appliquée au Développement et à la Santé
series Anthropologie & Santé
issn 2111-5028
publishDate 2017-03-01
description The French Law of 4 March 2002 permits seriously ill or dying inmates to obtain suspended sentences. This kind of “compassionate release” entitles French prisoners to request release if they are very ill while incarcerated. Inmates are not always able to obtain release on compassionate grounds. Most dying inmates are hospitalized in secure inpatient care units called “UHSI”, often for several weeks, sometimes until death. The purpose of this article is to highlight the realities regarding inmates at the end of life putting in perspective the points of views of the sick prisoners with those of the health and correctional professionals accompanying them. On the basis of a qualitative research, the challenge is to highlight several difficulties in providing adequate palliative care in UHSI for inmates. First, the spatial constraints of this unit limit relationships between caregivers, inmates and families. Second, the end of life trajectory of those inmates is characterized by complex decision making, with an uncertain temporality of death and an uncertain possibility of obtaining compassionate release.
topic end of life (EOL)
patient inmate
France
UHSI
palliative care
uncertainty
url http://journals.openedition.org/anthropologiesante/2441
work_keys_str_mv AT alinechassagne lafindeviedespatientsdetenus
AT aureliegodardmarceau lafindeviedespatientsdetenus
AT regisaubry lafindeviedespatientsdetenus
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