Are you a bereaved person?

Find out more about how INQUEST can help:

About INQUEST

INQUEST is a charity that provides a free advice service to bereaved people on contentious deaths and their investigation with a particular focus on deaths in custody. Casework also informs our research, parliamentary, campaigning and policy work.

What people say about INQUEST

We thought that we were going insane, couldn’t understand what was happening to us, what had happened to my son. INQUEST has supported, enabled, educated and empowered and restored our faith in justice. We were given back our voice. — Mother of a child who died in Young Offender Institution

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Deaths in prison

Photo of a prisonINQUEST believes that deaths in prison cannot be looked at separately from examining harsh and impoverished prison conditions, the use of segregation, poor medical care and prison overcrowding – all of which have implications for people’s mental and physical health. Until there is a fundamental review of the overuse of prison for the most vulnerable and marginalised, prison deaths will continue.

The growing prison population has resulted in the rise self-inflicted deaths in prison (over 900 out of more than 1,700 deaths in prison in England & Wales in the years 1997-2007) and the record number of women taking their own lives. Suicide prevention and prison overcrowding are incompatible and this dismal record should be a matter of national shame and prompt urgent reform.

INQUEST sits on the Ministerial Council on Deaths in Custody and works with the Prisons and Probations Ombudsman to raise thematic issues arising from our casework to ensure lessons are learnt from deaths in prison.

Find out more about:

Child and youth deaths in prison
Deaths of women in prison

Deaths in prison statistics.
Ministerial Council on Deaths in Custody

Oral evidence to the Home Affairs Committee on Prison Overcrowding
Click here to download our leaflet What to do if someone you knows dies in prison (PDF, 55KB)

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