The ministry is committed to providing greater transparency regarding any custodial-related deaths. The ministry is releasing data on all custodial-related deaths that occurred between January 1, 2022 and December 31, 2022.

The data is disaggregated based on:

  • individuals with mental health alerts
  • demographics including age, gender and race
  • location of death
  • region

Depending on the circumstances surrounding a custodial-related death, several investigations may occur, including:

  • a death investigation by the Office of the Chief Coroner to determine the cause and means of death
  • a local police investigation to determine if the death resulted from any criminal activity
  • an internal investigation to determine whether all ministry policies and procedures were followed with respect to the care and custody of the inmate

The ministry is committed to ensuring the safety and security of all inmates. It is the ministry’s policy that all institutional staff are responsible for the care of inmates. If staff believe that an inmate may pose a danger to themselves or others, staff must alert the appropriate officials and take necessary steps to ensure the safety of all involved. Suicide awareness training is required for all corrections and healthcare staff. Protocols are in place to care for inmates who are at risk for suicide, including the initiation of suicide risk alerts and suicide watch alerts.

If a coroner’s investigation determines that a death was not a result of natural causes, a mandatory inquest is called to examine the circumstances. Examples of natural causes can include internal body or organ failure not caused by external factors, a pre-existing health condition, or illness that could lead to death. The ministry carefully reviews and considers recommendations from an inquest to help prevent similar incidents from occurring in the future. Death inquest reports and schedule of inquests are publicly available.

Demographics

Between January 1, 2022 and December 31, 2022, 37 (0.11%) inmates died out of a total population of 32,463 unique individuals in custody. These deaths include custodial deaths where an individual was under the ministry’s supervision, as well as non-custodial deaths where an individual may have been on an unescorted temporary absence pass, on parole, in police custody, in custody of the Canada Border Security Agency, or had their charges stayed.

Of the inmates who died in 2022, three inmates (8%) self-identified as female, while 34 (92%) self-identified as male. There were 12 inmates (32%) who had self-identified as white, 10 (27%) self-identified as Indigenous, and four (11%) identified as another race category or reported more than one race. The race of the remaining eleven individuals (30%) was unknown or not reported.

Four (11%) inmates were under the age of 25 at the time of death, 28 (76%) inmates were between the ages of 25 and 49, and 5 (13%) were 50 or older.

Housing location

The ministry collects and analyzes information on all custodial-related deaths.

For the purposes of this report, the location prior to death has been organized into the following four categories:

  • General population or protective custody units.
  • Segregation conditions, where an inmate was in highly restricted conditions for 22 to 24 hours or does not receive a minimum of two hours of meaningful social interaction each day, excluding in circumstances of an unscheduled lockdown.
  • Specialized care units, where an inmate was held in a unit that is neither segregation nor general population and may be subject to some level of restriction on movement or interactions with others. For the purposes of this review, specialized care units include medical units and infirmaries within institutions.
  • Outside of a correctional facility, such as cases where an inmate was not within the ministry’s custody at the time of death.

Where an inmate was transferred to a hospital prior to death, the last known unit type has been included in the report.

Medical cause of death by gender, race and location

The means of death are determined by the Office of the Chief Coroner through a death investigation or an inquest. The official means of death have not been declared for all 37 inmates covered in this report.

The medical cause of death is determined by the Office of the Chief Coroner. For the purposes of this report, the specific medical causes of death from the Office of the Chief Coroner have been consolidated into categories by the ministry. The medical cause of death for the 37 inmates include:

  • 25 unknown to the ministry at the time of this release
  • four resulting from drug toxicity
  • eight as a result of a medical cause other than the above categories

In 2022, 25 (68%) individuals were in general population units, 6 (16%) were in specialized care units, three (8%) were in segregation conditions, and three (8%) had been outside of a correctional facility when the death occurred.

Medical causes of death by housing unit location
Medical cause of deathGeneral population or protective custody unitSpecialized care unitSegregation conditionsOutside of a facilityGrand total
Drug toxicity40004
Other41218
Unknown1751225
Grand total2563337

Mental health alerts

Staff may initiate the following alerts for inmates:

  • mental health alert, if the inmate discloses a history of a mental health condition, is showing signs that may indicate presence of a mental illness, or has disclosed thoughts about self-harm or suicide
  • suicide risk alert, if the inmate had previous suicide attempts or is at risk of posing harm to themselves or requires enhanced supervision
  • suicide watch alert, which is a type of suicide risk alert that indicates when an inmate requires increased supervision such as frequent in-person checks due to a high-risk of suicide or self-harm and requires increased supervision

An initial mental health screening is required within 48 hours of an inmate being admitted to an institution. If an inmate screens positive for a possible mental health condition, they are further assessed by health care professionals and may be referred to a psychiatrist or physician. Additionally, inmates are also reassessed for mental health care needs at least once every six months of continuous custody. Mental health professionals are required to add mental health alerts, verify new and existing mental health alerts and expire inactive alerts as appropriate throughout an individual’s stay in custody.

Serious mental illness alerts are also included in the list of mental health alerts in OTIS. The identification of an inmate requiring a serious mental illness alert is made when:

  • a regulated health professional who is qualified to make diagnoses within their clinical scope considers the inmate to be experiencing at least one disorder as identified in O. Reg. 778, or
  • an institutional staff member has determined that an inmate is experiencing at least one of a list of symptoms outlined in O. Reg. 778.

All mental health alerts are required to be verified by mental health professionals. Health care staff are required to assess individuals and verify mental health alerts in the ministry’s OTIS within 48 hours of the alert being entered. As a result, the data for this release includes both verified and unverified mental health alerts recorded on the inmate’s file for the period of supervision prior to death.

Alerts and housing unit type
Housing unit typeMental health alertSuicide risk alertSuicide watch alert
General population or protective custody unit251
Specialized care unit300
Segregation conditions110
Outside of a facility000
Grand Total661

Of the 37 individual deaths examined in this report, six individuals (16%) had a mental health alert on their file and six (16%) had a suicide risk alert. One inmate (3%) had a suicide watch alert on file.