4.6 Article

Ten Urgent Priorities Based on Lessons Learned From More Than a Half Million Known COVID-19 Cases in US Prisons

Journal

AMERICAN JOURNAL OF PUBLIC HEALTH
Volume 111, Issue 6, Pages 1099-1105

Publisher

AMER PUBLIC HEALTH ASSOC INC
DOI: 10.2105/AJPH.2021.306221

Keywords

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Funding

  1. National Institute on Drug Abuse, National Institutes of Health [K23 DA045747-01]
  2. California Community Foundation [BA-19-154836]
  3. University of California, Los Angeles Children's Discovery and Innovation Institute
  4. National Institute on Aging, National Institutes of Health under the Aging Research in Criminal Justice Health Network [R24AG065175]
  5. University of California, San Francisco Pepper Center [P30 AG044281]

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COVID-19 is causing havoc in US prisons, requiring a swift public health response with 10 key priorities, including population reduction, improved ventilation, mask use, and mental health support for residents and staff. Collaboration between prison leadership, public health departments, and community advocates is essential to address the outsized impact of the pandemic in prisons.
COVID-19 is ravaging US prisons. Prison residents and staff must be prioritized for vaccination, but a rapidly mutating virus and high rates of continued spread require an urgent, coordinated public health response. Based on knowledge accumulated from the pandemic thus far, we have identified 10 pressing public health priorities for responding to COVID-19 in prisons: (1) accelerate population reduction coupled with community reentry support, (2) improve prison ventilation systems, (3) ensure appropriate mask use, (4) limit transfers between facilities, (5) strengthen partnerships between public health departments and prison leadership, (6) introduce or maintain effective occupational health programs, (7) ensure access to advance care planning processes for incarcerated patients and delineation of patient health care rights, (8) strengthen partnerships between prison leadership and incarcerated people, (9) provide emergency mental health support for prison residents and staff, and (10) commit to public accountability and transparency. Dedicated prison leaders cannot accomplish these public health priorities alone. We must mobilize prison leaders, staff, and residents; public health departments; community advocates; and policymakers to work together to address the pandemic's outsized impact in US prisons.

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