MA. This research was carried out as a basis for a programme and thus enabled the development of a well-informed national policy on suicide and self-harm in prisons. Morocco is the first country in the Middle East and North Africa region, if not the only one, to have developed a framework of principles on suicide and self-harm in prisons. This was possible because the recommendations we made to the prison authority were based on evidence coming directly from their country.
A comprehensive training programme and procedures manual were drawn up based on our research. The training module is aimed not only at health staff, but also at security and social services personnel. We made sure it was not us from Copenhagen who provided the training, but that a group of local prison staff became trainers. The team has since trained more than 2,000 personnel, including all the medical staff and key staff in every prison in the country. Training is provided annually so that all new key staff in each facility are trained in the policy and the manual.
A monitoring system has also been put in place. For every self-harm and suicide case, data is now collected from all departments, not just the health department. At the end of the year, trends can now be identified and compared from one year to the next, for example in terms of the tools being used for self-harm.
An internal multidisciplinary committee, made of different departments within the prison service, has been established as a result of our study. This committee should meet once a year to examine annual trends and review policies accordingly. It is coordinated by the health department and brings together the security department, the social services, the human resources, etc. Its primary objective is to enable the prison authorities to be aware of what is happening in their prisons. It provides them with an overview of the tendencies and an understanding of them, rather than just considering individual cases. For example, the committee discussed the issue of razors at its last meeting. The prison administration has very rigorous and comprehensive policies on when prisoners are supposed to get a razor and return it. We discussed this at the last meeting to make the administration aware that perhaps this issue needed to be re-examined. Solitary confinement and its alternatives were also discussed, but it is clear that change takes effort and time. This committee therefore allows a wide range of discussions to take place, some of them quite practical, others more policy-oriented.
It should nevertheless be emphasised that while policies and measures aimed at reducing the number of suicides and cases of self-harm are being put in place, mental health problems in Moroccan prisons are still a challenge due to chronic overcrowding and understaffing.
We are continuing to support the prison administration and, in particular, over the next few years we will be carrying out a study into the risk factors for self-harm in Moroccan prisons, rather than just looking at cases as we did in this research. This time, it will be a case-control study: we will compare people who have self-harmed with those who have not, in order to determine what the risk factors are. This will enable us to identify the people at risk, so that we can better target measures to prevent self-harm.