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Suicide, suicide attempts and self-harm in Moroccan prisons

Maha Aon (Department of Health, DIGNITY, Danish Institute against Torture, Copenhagen, Denmark and Department of Epidemiology and Population Health, Faculty of Health Sciences, American University of Beirut, Beirut, Lebanon)
Anne Katrine Graudal Levinsen (Department of Health, DIGNITY, Danish Institute Against Torture, Copenhagen, Denmark)
Taoufiq Abtal (Division d’Action Sanitaire, La Délégation Générale à l’Administration Pénitentiaire et à la Reinsertion (DGAPR), Rabat, Morocco)
Mouna Regragui (Division d’Action Sanitaire, La Délégation Générale à l’Administration Pénitentiaire et à la Reinsertion (DGAPR), Rabat, Morocco)
Che Henry Ngwa (Department of Epidemiology and Population Health, Faculty of Health Sciences, American University of Beirut, Beirut, Lebanon)
Dominique Berhan Leth-Sørensen (Department of Health, DIGNITY, Danish Institute against Torture, Copenhagen, Denmark)
Mohamed Bouharras (Division d’Action Sanitaire, La Délégation Générale à l’Administration Pénitentiaire et à la Reinsertion (DGAPR), Rabat, Morocco)
Majda Azzouzi (Division d’Action Sanitaire, La Délégation Générale à l’Administration Pénitentiaire et à la Reinsertion (DGAPR), Rabat, Morocco)
Adil Benjelloun (Division d’Action Sanitaire, La Délégation Générale à l’Administration Pénitentiaire et à la Reinsertion (DGAPR), Rabat, Morocco)
Nisrine Riffai (Division d’Action Sanitaire, La Délégation Générale à l’Administration Pénitentiaire et à la Reinsertion (DGAPR), Rabat, Morocco)
Marie Brasholt (Department of Health, DIGNITY, Danish Institute against Torture, Copenhagen, Denmark)

International Journal of Prison Health

ISSN: 2977-0254

Article publication date: 20 December 2023

Issue publication date: 6 February 2024

76

Abstract

Purpose

High rates of suicide and self-harm are reported in prisons in Western countries, while fewer studies exist from a non-Western context. This study aims to identify rates of suicide, non-fatal suicide attempts and self-harm in Moroccan prisons and to better understand the context, methods, tools, predictors and profile of persons engaged in the acts.

Design/methodology/approach

The authors report findings from a mixed-methods study carried out before an intervention project. The study consists of a systematic literature review, an analysis of suicide case files, a quantitative survey on suicide attempts and self-harm, as well as interviews and focus group discussions. The authors calculate suicide, suicide attempt and self-harm rates and present descriptive data on the incidents. The authors use regression models to explore the association between the number of incidents per individual and selected predictors, adjusting for clustering by institution.

Findings

Over a four-year period, 29 detained persons in Morocco died by suicide (average annual suicide rate 8.7 per 100,000). Most were men under the age of 30. Hanging accounted for all but one case. In one year, 230 suicide attempts were reported. Over a three-months period, 110 self-harm cases were reported from 18 institutions, cutting being the most common method. Self-harm was significantly more prevalent among persons with a life sentence or repeated incarcerations.

Research limitations/implications

To make the study manageable as part of an intervention project, the authors collected data on suicides and suicide attempts from all prisons, while data on self-harm were collected from fewer prisons and over a shorter time period. The authors did not collect comparable information from detained persons who did not die by suicide, attempt suicide or self-harm. This prevented comparative analyses. Further, it is possible that self-harm cases were not reported if they did not result in serious physical injury. Data were collected by prison staff; thus, the voice of incarcerated persons is absent.

Practical implications

This study provided a solid basis for designing an intervention project including the development of a national prison policy and guidelines on suicides, suicide attempts and self-harm and a country-wide training program for prison staff. It also led to a better surveillance system, allowing for trend analysis and better-informed policymaking. The qualitative results helped create an understanding of how staff may trivialize self-harm. This was integrated into the training package for staff, resulting in the creation of prison staff trainers who became the strongest advocates against the notion that self-harm was best ignored.

Originality/value

To the best of the authors’ knowledge, this is the first published data on suicide and self-harm in Moroccan prisons. It underscores the necessity for the intervention project and gives valuable insights into suicide and self-harm in a non-Western prison context. Further research is needed to assess whether the findings are typical of the region.

Keywords

Acknowledgements

Open Society Foundations. OR2016-32203.

Funding: This research was part of a project funded by the Open Society Foundation and implemented by DIGNITY, Danish Institute against Torture.

Citation

Aon, M., Levinsen, A.K.G., Abtal, T., Regragui, M., Ngwa, C.H., Leth-Sørensen, D.B., Bouharras, M., Azzouzi, M., Benjelloun, A., Riffai, N. and Brasholt, M. (2024), "Suicide, suicide attempts and self-harm in Moroccan prisons", International Journal of Prison Health, Vol. 20 No. 1, pp. 88-101. https://doi.org/10.1108/IJOPH-12-2022-0078

Publisher

:

Emerald Publishing Limited

Copyright © 2023, Emerald Publishing Limited

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