The effect of a peer-led problem-support mentor intervention on self-harm and violence in prison: An interrupted time series analysis using routinely collected prison data

Background: Levels of mental disorder, self-harm and violent behaviour are higher in prisons than in the community. The purpose of this study was to determine whether a brief peer-led problem-support mentor intervention could reduce the incidence of self-harm and violence in an English prison. Metho...

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Main Authors: Amanda E. Perry, Mitch G. Waterman, Veronica Dale, Keeley Moore, Allan House
Format: Article
Language:English
Published: Elsevier 2021-02-01
Series:EClinicalMedicine
Subjects:
Online Access:http://www.sciencedirect.com/science/article/pii/S2589537020304466
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spelling doaj-7ea593e4202e479c80f9012ac5c91e472021-02-27T04:39:48ZengElsevierEClinicalMedicine2589-53702021-02-0132100702The effect of a peer-led problem-support mentor intervention on self-harm and violence in prison: An interrupted time series analysis using routinely collected prison dataAmanda E. Perry0Mitch G. Waterman1Veronica Dale2Keeley Moore3Allan House4Department of Health Sciences, University of York, York YO10 5DD, UK; Corresponding author.School of Psychology, University of Leeds, Leeds LS2 9JT, UKDepartment of Health Sciences, University of York, York YO10 5DD, UKHMP Wealstun, Thorpe Arch, Wetherby LS237AZ, UKSchool of Medicine, University of Leeds, Leeds LS2 9JT, UKBackground: Levels of mental disorder, self-harm and violent behaviour are higher in prisons than in the community. The purpose of this study was to determine whether a brief peer-led problem-support mentor intervention could reduce the incidence of self-harm and violence in an English prison. Methods: An existing intervention was adapted using a theory of change model and eligible prisoners were trained to become problem-support mentors. Delivery of the intervention took two forms: (i) promotion of the intervention to fellow prisoners, offering support and raising awareness of the intervention but not delivering the skills and (ii) delivery of the problem-solving therapy skills to selected individual prisoners. Training and intervention adherence was measured using mentor log books. We used an Interrupted Time Series (ITS) design utilizing prison data over a 31 month period. Three ITS models and sensitivity analyses were used to address the impact across the whole prison and in the two groups by intervention delivery. Outcomes included self-harm and violent behaviour. Routine data were collected at monthly intervals 16 months pre-, 10 months during and six months post-intervention. Qualitative data measured the acceptability, feasibility, impact and sustainability of the intervention. A matched case-control study followed people after release to assess the feasibility of formal evaluation of the impact on re-offending up to 16 months. Findings: Our causal map identified that mental health and wellbeing in the prison were associated with environmental and social factors. We found a significant reduction in the incidence of self-harm for those receiving the full problem-solving therapy skills. No significant reduction was found for incidence of violent behaviour. Interpretation: Universal prison-wide strategies should consider a series of multi-level interventions to address mental health and well-being in prisons. Funding: Research Champions Fund and the Economic and Social Research Council Impact Acceleration Account Fund, University of York, UK.http://www.sciencedirect.com/science/article/pii/S2589537020304466Problem-solving therapyInterrupted time seriesSystematic reviewPrisonSelf-harmViolence
collection DOAJ
language English
format Article
sources DOAJ
author Amanda E. Perry
Mitch G. Waterman
Veronica Dale
Keeley Moore
Allan House
spellingShingle Amanda E. Perry
Mitch G. Waterman
Veronica Dale
Keeley Moore
Allan House
The effect of a peer-led problem-support mentor intervention on self-harm and violence in prison: An interrupted time series analysis using routinely collected prison data
EClinicalMedicine
Problem-solving therapy
Interrupted time series
Systematic review
Prison
Self-harm
Violence
author_facet Amanda E. Perry
Mitch G. Waterman
Veronica Dale
Keeley Moore
Allan House
author_sort Amanda E. Perry
title The effect of a peer-led problem-support mentor intervention on self-harm and violence in prison: An interrupted time series analysis using routinely collected prison data
title_short The effect of a peer-led problem-support mentor intervention on self-harm and violence in prison: An interrupted time series analysis using routinely collected prison data
title_full The effect of a peer-led problem-support mentor intervention on self-harm and violence in prison: An interrupted time series analysis using routinely collected prison data
title_fullStr The effect of a peer-led problem-support mentor intervention on self-harm and violence in prison: An interrupted time series analysis using routinely collected prison data
title_full_unstemmed The effect of a peer-led problem-support mentor intervention on self-harm and violence in prison: An interrupted time series analysis using routinely collected prison data
title_sort effect of a peer-led problem-support mentor intervention on self-harm and violence in prison: an interrupted time series analysis using routinely collected prison data
publisher Elsevier
series EClinicalMedicine
issn 2589-5370
publishDate 2021-02-01
description Background: Levels of mental disorder, self-harm and violent behaviour are higher in prisons than in the community. The purpose of this study was to determine whether a brief peer-led problem-support mentor intervention could reduce the incidence of self-harm and violence in an English prison. Methods: An existing intervention was adapted using a theory of change model and eligible prisoners were trained to become problem-support mentors. Delivery of the intervention took two forms: (i) promotion of the intervention to fellow prisoners, offering support and raising awareness of the intervention but not delivering the skills and (ii) delivery of the problem-solving therapy skills to selected individual prisoners. Training and intervention adherence was measured using mentor log books. We used an Interrupted Time Series (ITS) design utilizing prison data over a 31 month period. Three ITS models and sensitivity analyses were used to address the impact across the whole prison and in the two groups by intervention delivery. Outcomes included self-harm and violent behaviour. Routine data were collected at monthly intervals 16 months pre-, 10 months during and six months post-intervention. Qualitative data measured the acceptability, feasibility, impact and sustainability of the intervention. A matched case-control study followed people after release to assess the feasibility of formal evaluation of the impact on re-offending up to 16 months. Findings: Our causal map identified that mental health and wellbeing in the prison were associated with environmental and social factors. We found a significant reduction in the incidence of self-harm for those receiving the full problem-solving therapy skills. No significant reduction was found for incidence of violent behaviour. Interpretation: Universal prison-wide strategies should consider a series of multi-level interventions to address mental health and well-being in prisons. Funding: Research Champions Fund and the Economic and Social Research Council Impact Acceleration Account Fund, University of York, UK.
topic Problem-solving therapy
Interrupted time series
Systematic review
Prison
Self-harm
Violence
url http://www.sciencedirect.com/science/article/pii/S2589537020304466
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