Mhlanga-Gunda Rosemary, Kewley Stephanie, Chivandikwa Nehemiah, Van Hout Marie-Claire
Department of Community Medicine, University of Zimbabwe, Harare, Zimbabwe.
Department of Psychology, Liverpool John Moores University, Liverpool, UK.
Int J Prison Health. 2020 Apr 27;16(3):319-336. doi: 10.1108/IJPH-11-2019-0063.
The Sub-Saharan African (SSA) region remains at the epicentre of the HIV epidemic and disproportionately affecting women, girls and prisoners. Women in prison are a minority group and their special health needs relating to gender sensitivity, reproductive health, their children and HIV/AIDs are frequently neglected. Our study responded to this need, and aimed to investigate the issue.
DESIGN/METHODOLOGY/APPROACH: A qualitative study using focus group discussions and key informant interviews explored the perspectives of women in prison, correctional officers, correctional health professionals and non-governmental organisations around prison conditions and standards of health care while incarcerated in a large female prison in Zimbabwe. Narratives were transcribed and analysed using thematic analysis.
The three key themes that emerged are as follows: "Sanitation and hygiene in the prison", "Nutrition for women and children" and "Prison-based health services and health care". Divergence or agreement across perspectives around adequate standards of sanitation, hygiene, quality and adequacy of food, special diets for those with health conditions, access to health care in prison and the continuum of care across incarceration and community are presented.
Understanding prison environmental cultures which shape correctional staff's understanding and responsiveness to women in prison, environmental health conditions and access to health care are vital to improve conditions and continuum of care in Zimbabwe.
ORIGINALITY/VALUE: Policy and technical guidance continues to emphasise the need for research in SSA prisons to garner insight into the experiences of women and their children, with a particular emphasis on the prison environment for them, their health outcomes and health-care continuum. This unique study responded to this need.
撒哈拉以南非洲(SSA)地区仍是艾滋病毒疫情的中心,且对妇女、女孩和囚犯的影响尤为严重。狱中女性是一个少数群体,她们在性别敏感度、生殖健康、子女以及艾滋病毒/艾滋病方面的特殊健康需求常常被忽视。我们的研究回应了这一需求,旨在调查该问题。
设计/方法/途径:一项定性研究,采用焦点小组讨论和关键知情人访谈,探讨了津巴布韦一所大型女子监狱中女性囚犯、惩教人员、惩教卫生专业人员和非政府组织对监禁期间监狱条件和医疗保健标准的看法。对访谈内容进行转录,并采用主题分析法进行分析。
出现的三个关键主题如下:“监狱中的卫生与清洁”“妇女和儿童的营养”以及“基于监狱的卫生服务与医疗保健”。呈现了围绕卫生设施、卫生条件、食品质量与充足性、健康状况特殊人群的特殊饮食、狱中医疗保健可及性以及监禁与社区间连续护理等方面的不同观点或一致看法。
了解塑造惩教人员对狱中女性的理解和反应的监狱环境文化、环境卫生条件以及医疗保健可及性,对于改善津巴布韦的监狱条件和连续护理至关重要。
原创性/价值:政策和技术指导持续强调有必要对撒哈拉以南非洲地区的监狱进行研究,以深入了解妇女及其子女的经历,尤其侧重于她们所处的监狱环境、健康结果和医疗保健连续性。这项独特的研究回应了这一需求。