Woodhill is a category B Training Prison (listed as category A until 2020 when it was recategorised as category B) for male adults, with an adjacent unit for young offenders. The prison holds convicted prisoners from magistrates' courts along with foreign nationals awaiting deportation. The regime at Woodhill includes full-time and part-time classes. Other features include a job club, and listener schemes. Woodhill also has a multi-faith full-time
chaplaincy. There is a visitors' centre at the prison, run by the
Prison Advice and Care Trust. In 2017, Dr Elizabeth van Horn, an experienced prison psychiatrist, left her job at Woodhill and alleged that staff shortages prevented change. The courts, the
Prisons and Probation Ombudsman and the prison's independent monitoring board all expressed concerns over regular understaffing, too much reliance on agency and temporary staff, and assaults on both staff and inmates have also risen in the last few years as have suicides (see below). Van Horn claimed no real changes happened despite promises management made; they knew what needed to be done but did not know how to achieve improvements. Staff shortages meant prisoners were often locked in their cells for 23 hours a day, which added to stress for prisoners with mental health issues.
Suicides There were seventeen suicides at Woodhill Prison between 2013 and late 2016. This was the highest suicide rate of any prison in the UK. Staff shortages and the complexity of the prison were blamed. Woodhill's
Independent Monitoring Board had warned over "significant problems" in the prison, due to "serious staff shortages" and "increased use of new psychoactive drugs", which made prisoners inclined to violence and self-harm.
Coroners' reports have noted the jail repeatedly failed to meet requirements of national policy on suicide and emergency response. ==References==