Dying in Prison: Advancing End-of-Life Care, Staff Support, and Systemic Reform Through Death Cafes and Advance Care Planning in a U.S. Women’s Prison (PID175)

4.30pm – 5pm GMT+03:00, 27 October 2025 ‐ 30 mins

Thematic Workshop Sessions

This presentation highlights an innovative end-of-life care initiative at the Washington Corrections Center for Women, developed in partnership with medical staff and the incarcerated peer-led HOPE Team. The project includes Death Cafes, Advance Care Planning education, and staff training on grief, palliative care, and chronic illness management. As the incarcerated population ages - particularly among women - correctional systems face critical gaps in providing dignified care for those nearing the end of life. This program addresses wellbeing across three dimensions: incarcerated individuals gain space to discuss death and plan for their futures; systemic reforms support trauma-informed, culturally grounded care; and the emotional and professional impacts on correctional and medical staff are addressed through tools and training that promote grief processing and resilience. Aligned with the Nelson Mandela Rules, the Bangkok Rules, and global standards, this project presents a replicable model for promoting dignity, autonomy, and healing inside prisons.
 
Moderated by John May, Special Advisor, Healthcare Network, ICPA, United States