Official Statistics

HM Prison and Probation Service COVID-19 Statistics, May 2022

Published 17 June 2022

HM Prison and Probation Service COVID-19 Official Statistics

Data to 31 May 2022

Ministry of Justice

Published 17 June 2022

Introduction

This official statistics release provides monthly data on the spread of COVID-19 in the prison and probation service in England and Wales and mitigating actions being taken to limit the spread of the virus and save lives. This release covers the period from Monday 16 March 2020 at the start of the COVID-19 outbreak to 31 May 2022.

It provides information on:

  • Deaths where prisoners, children in custody or supervised individuals have died having tested positive within 60 days, in England and Wales, of the death or where there was a clinical assessment COVID-19 was a contributory factor in their death regardless of cause of death.

  • Confirmed COVID-19 cases in prisoners and children in custody (i.e. positive tests).

  • Narrative on capacity management data for prisons.

Key Findings

The key findings in this release are:

  • 285 prisoners and supervised individuals have died having tested positive within 60 days of death or where there was a clinical assessment COVID-19 was a contributory factor in their death. Of whom 197 were prisoners and 88 were individuals supervised by the probation service. There were 2 deaths in May 2022.

  • Of the 285 deaths, 241 were suspected or confirmed to be caused by COVID-19, of whom 157 were prisoners and 84 were supervised individuals.

  • 42,393 prisoners or children in custody have tested positive for COVID-19 since the start of the pandemic, across 130 establishments, almost all of whom were adults.

  • There were 539 new confirmed cases in May 2022, this is 2,411 less than in April 2022.

  • 66 establishments had prisoners or children testing positive in May 2022, a reduction of 41 compared with April 2022.

Background

Since the start of the COVID-19 pandemic, there has been keen public and Parliamentary interest in how the Ministry of Justice (MOJ) and Her Majesty’s Prison and Probation Service (HMPPS) are managing the running of prisons and the probation system to limit the spread of the virus while maintaining the core functions of these vital parts of the justice system. Publishing this data aims to bring transparency to the strategies HMPPS is employing to manage the prison and probation systems, as well as the impact of the virus on the individuals in the care of HMPPS and staff.

The core tenet of HMPPS’s prison strategy, building on UK Health Security Agency (UKHSA) advice and learning developed in managing an early outbreak of the virus, has been the implementation of effective isolation, reverse cohorting of new entrants to custody, and shielding of vulnerable prisoners. In May, as part of the ‘Living with COVID’ strategy, many of these controls shifted from centrally directed to local decision making in response to remaining COVID risk. Shielding prisoners have been invited to complete Personal Management Plans as a more permanent response to their ongoing risk. As part of these changes, HMPPS now provides residual regular testing for staff and prisoners to in specific high-risk areas to enable early identification of cases. Increased testing guidance remains and may be implemented in response to local risk. HMPPS continue to support the rollout of vaccination by Healthcare teams to the prison population.

1. Capacity management

As at 27 May 2022, the prison population was 80,200, showing a reduction of 3,500 since 13 March 2020[footnote 1]. Whilst total population has reduced, the remand population has increased during the pandemic, mostly due to the challenges in holding Crown Court trials during this period.

HMPPS have adopted a capacity management approach known as ‘compartmentalisation’. This involves the isolation of all prisoners with either a positive test result, or symptoms, personal management plans for clinically vulnerable prisoners and all new arrivals being required to test on day 0/1 and advised to test on day 5/6. These measures minimise the risk of infection spreading throughout prisons.

The strategy is being kept under ongoing review and regularly adapted in response to operational learning as well as evolving pandemic risks in the community. There is a balance between effective infection control and maintaining a commitment to support prisoners through their custodial sentence and help them access appropriate services.

2. Deaths

The service has taken the measures outlined to limit the spread of the virus and to protect staff and individuals in the care of HMPPS. However, prisons and probation, like all other sectors in the England in Wales have experienced deaths due to COVID-19.

The counting of deaths in prisons and probation are aligned to the UK Health Security Agency definition, and reports on deaths where the individual had tested positive for COVID-19 or where there was a clinical assessment that COVID-19 was a contributory factor in their death. This consists of:

  • Deaths suspected or confirmed to be due to COVID-19

  • Deaths believed to be due to other causes, but where the individual had tested positive for COVID-19.

From March 2020 to the end of May 2022, 285 individuals in the care of HMPPS died having tested positive for COVID-19 within 60 days of death or where it was confirmed post-mortem as a contributing factor. 197 were prisoners. There were no deaths of children in custody. 88 of the 282 individuals were being supervised in the community [footnote 2]. The most recent death of an individual supervised in the community occurred in January 2022. Figure 1 shows the cumulative numbers of prisoner and supervised individual deaths since March 2020.

Figure 1: Cumulative number of individuals in the care of HMPPS in prison and supervised in the community who have died testing positive within 60 days of the death or where it was confirmed post-mortem, England and Wales, monthly from March 2020 (Source: Summary Tables, Table 1)

55 deaths occurred before July 2020, 166 deaths between October 2020 and April 2021, 43 deaths between July 2021 and December 2021 and 21 deaths since January 2021. There were 2 deaths in May 2022. The overall cumulative total rose by one additional death which has recently been reported centrally, occurring in October 2021.

Of the 197 prisoner deaths, 157 are suspected or confirmed to be due to COVID-19. The remaining 40 deaths are believed to be due to other causes, although the individuals had tested positive for COVID-19. Of the 88 individuals under probation supervision who have died, 84 are suspected or confirmed to be due to COVID-19 with the remaining 4 believed to be due to other causes, but where the individual has tested positive for COVID-19.

The cause of death in each case is provisional until the official cause of death has been determined by the coroner. As such revisions may be made to the data as part of this process.

Data relating to the deaths of prison and probation officers to 31 March 2022 have been published in the HMPPS Workforce Statistics.

Data relating to the deaths of service users have also been published in the National Statistics report Safety in Custody and in the official statistics report Deaths of Offenders in the Community.

3. Testing

Testing practices in prisons and Youth Custody Service (YCS) sites have been determined locally. Initially, once a small sample of prisoners or children had tested positive in an establishment, no further tests were carried out on symptomatic individuals to preserve testing kits and on the assumption all further tests would be positive. This policy was changed on 15 April 2020 due to the increased availability of testing supplies meaning all symptomatic prisoners or children are now tested. As such data trends should be considered with caution and do not represent true like-for-like comparisons.

Since the start of the COVID-19 pandemic to 31 May 2022, a cumulative total of 42,393 prisoners or children in custody tested positive for COVID-19 across 130 establishments. Less than 1% (393) of these positive tests were children. There were 539 new confirmed cases in May 2022. Figure 2 shows the cumulative monthly individuals testing positive for COVID-19 to the end of May 2022.

Figure 2: Cumulative number of prisoners and children in custody testing positive for COVID-19, England and Wales, monthly from March 2020 (Source: Summary Tables, Table 2).

66 establishments had prisoners or children testing positive during May 2022, the lowest number since September 2021. The overall number of establishments with prisoners or children testing positive each month has been falling since January 2022 as shown in figure 3.

Figure 3: Number of Prison or Youth Custody Service establishments with prisoners or children in custody testing positive for COVID-19, England and Wales, monthly from March 2020 (Source: Summary Tables, Table 2).

Recognising the unique environment in prisons, HMPPS now routinely test staff and offenders to bolster defences against the virus: to identify and isolate cases earlier and move quickly to contain outbreaks, protect local NHS and save lives.

Throughout the pandemic HMPPS has been working closely with the Department of Health and Social Care, the NHS, and health authority colleagues in England and Wales in determining the appropriate COVID testing regime and providing access to test kits.

Initially this involved the testing of symptomatic prisoners; then from the start of summer 2020 this was extended to commence asymptomatic testing of prisoners and people who work in prisons. The testing regime has varied as testing capacity has increased and in response to the risks presented by prevalence. This has included regular asymptomatic testing of staff and the testing of prisoners at the points at transition (new reception, transfer, discharge). Mass testing of prisoners and staff has also been undertaken at sites in Outbreak following the recommendations of the health led Outbreak Control Teams.

Data Quality

Although care is taken when processing and analysing the returns, the detail collected is subject to the inaccuracies inherent in any large-scale recording system. Any inaccuracies may result in revisions of previously published information in future releases. Much of the data collected during the COVID-19 pandemic has been done at pace, with recording practices evolving as we understand more about the requirements and conditions we are facing. In order to present the timeliest information, the data presented in this report have not been subjected to the usual standard of quality assurance associated with official statistics.

Much of the data will undergo additional assurance in due course and be reported as official statistics in the following releases:

All deaths are phoned into MOJ headquarters on a daily basis. The cause of deaths in prison are classified as apparent until a police investigation and coroner’s inquest have been concluded and the Prisons and Probation Ombudsman’s office publish a detailed ‘Fatal Incident Report’. Recording practices for COVID-19 related deaths have been updated since the start of the pandemic, meaning the exact cause is not always available or known. Furthermore, the cause of many deaths will be uncertain and awaiting an inquest; we have taken steps to reflect this uncertainty by reporting all cases in which COVID-19 was suspected to be a factor.

Contact points

Press enquiries should be directed to the Ministry of Justice press office:

Email: PressOfficePrisonsDesk@justice.gov.uk

Tel: 020 3334 3536

Other enquiries about these statistics should be directed to:

Rory Heard

Email: PPRWS_Correspondence@justice.gov.uk

Next update: 15 July 2022

© Crown copyright

Produced by the Ministry of Justice

Alternative formats are available on request from PPRWS_Correspondence@justice.gov.uk

  1. Prison population figures can be found at https://www.gov.uk/government/statistics/prison-population-figures-2022 

  2. On the 26 June 2021 the National Probation Service was renamed the Probation Service and took on responsibility for supervising low and medium risk offenders previously managed by Community and Rehabilitation Companies.