Drink and Drugs News DDN 1805 | Page 7

More on prison treatment at www.drinkanddrugsnews.com ‘[With the other inmates] it was very basic, there was no friendship or relationship there really, it was just focused on getting and using the drugs, that was as far as it went. You were just talking about what’s happening and who has the money and who has the gear and who will score and where to use it and stuff like that.’ (Adam) The disparity involved in the power dynamics between heroin users and dealers became particularly evident during withdrawal, when biopsychosocial discomfort induced fear and isolation. Sizeable debts could also build up among prisoners, creating additional complications – often compounded by prisoners’ mental health problems. Certainly the participants in this study reported mistrust of both the authorities and other prisoners, where heroin had the dual purpose of being both ‘a blessing and a curse’. ‘You've gotta deal with people who you're buying it off and they obviously use it as an element of power… Then the obvious violence that goes with it as well, cos things don't always run smoothly... People rob other people, nick their stuff, people don't pay people, so it's kinda like, yeah, looking back I don't know how I had the energy to do it.’ (Ben) ‘It kept my emotions stable. Constantly when I was on gear, I'd feel composed, I don't get angry, I don't get upset, I just deal with stuff.’ Lana Durjava has a background in forensic psychology and works at HMP Pentonville www.drinkanddrugsnews.com May 2018 | drinkanddrugsnews | 7 T he study aimed to contribute to the existing knowledge about the psychological and social experience of heroin addiction in prison – an experience that could be summarised as a life of lonely compulsion in a mundane and ruthless environment. While the findings cannot be generalised to the wider prison population, they nevertheless offer a fair indication of the everyday reality of people who experience heroin addiction during incarceration. British prisons are in a state of perpetual crisis, with endemic drug use, bullying and violence being fundamental parts of daily reality. The prison system currently appears to be mostly about containment and risk management and is characterised by limited resources, staff shortages, lack of meaningful activities and support services that are inadequate in responding to prisoners’ needs. It is hoped that, with time, an holistic approach will be more consistently adopted that addresses the multiple health, social and psychological needs of the prison population, despite all the contextual pressures and factors that hinder recovery from compulsive drug use and offending. Furthermore, it is hoped that the prison service will employ less punitive strategies in the detection and punishment of illicit drug users – and that custodial sentencing will incarcerate violent offenders, rather than those who are vulnerable, with complex needs, and deemed ‘petty’ criminals.