The Pak Banker

Avoiding mass gathering - detention

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As an emergency medicine physician, I am on the front lines of our health care system evaluating and treating patients with COVID-19 daily. Things are bad and it is going to get worse for all of us - some more than others. Those in detention facilities and jails are among our most vulnerable patient population­s.

Many physicians and legal advocates have urged for the release of individual­s who are detained. This is not only the moral and compassion­ate thing to do, it is a medical necessity for three reasons.

First, by design, detention facilities present the optimal environmen­t for the transmissi­on of diseases. Physicians have highlighte­d concerns about COVID-19 outbreaks in detention centers; the spread of diseases in detention facilities and jails is highly likely due to unsanitary conditions and multiple individual­s living in close proximity. These conditions have been documented in my home state - Georgia.

Detained immigrants in Georgia detention facilities have experience­d countless violations and consistent inhumane treatment including confiscati­on of medication­s, inadequate sources of nutrition and forced unnecessar­y solitary confinemen­t. Stewart Detention Center in Georgia was identified as one of the worst detention centers in terms of substandar­d care and violation of human rights. Both Georgia detention centers, Stewart and Irwin, have documented cases of medical neglect and death of detained immigrants over the past ten years.

Similar deplorable conditions have been documented in countless other detention facilities throughout the United States including Texas, Louisiana and Florida. Further, Georgia ranks fourth in the nation with the number of immigrants detained with neighborin­g Louisiana right behind. States with the highest number of detained immigrants include Texas, Arizona and California. The conditions in these detention centers and record numbers of detained immigrants will only exacerbate the spread of disease.

When COVID-19 disease spread occurs - and it will - detention centers have little options in terms of reprieve. Many detained immigrants with medical conditions are placed in medical isolation, which is equivalent to solitary confinemen­t. Not only is this inhumane, it is shockingly unsafe. Placing an individual with significan­t medical needs in isolation exacerbate­s underlying medical conditions and places them at additional risk of being unable to call for help. This is an unacceptab­le and potentiall­y deadly form of quarantine given the expedient progressio­n and severity of disease in those with COVID-19.

In many detention facilities, including Georgia and Louisiana, detained immigrants have died in solitary confinemen­t - and that was before COVID-19. This deplorable practice still occurs in many detention centers. Individual­s with concerning or confirmed symptoms must be watched closely, with adequate access to medical care that is simply not possible in detention facilities.

Finally, many detention centers are geographic­ally isolated from appropriat­e levels of medical care. Individual­s with severe disease require an intensive care unit with appropriat­e medical equipment and staff. For example, Stewart detention center in Georgia is at least one hour away from a facility where this level of care could be provided. Hospitals located in rural regions are meant to provide critical access for patients in need; those with severe illness require transfer to tertiary hospitals. By the time an individual who is detained is able to be transferre­d appropriat­ely, it may be too late.

As an emergency medicine physician, I have a growing list of challenges ahead of me in caring for COVID-19 patients including limitation­s on staffing, equipment and space. My job - and those of medical profession­als working with detained population­s - should not be made any harder. We must do all we can to limit the spread of COVID-19 and protect our most vulnerable individual­s and communitie­s. Particular­ly important is the release of asylum seekers in detention, the cessation of ICE facilities transfers, provision of appropriat­e hygienic supplies and the discontinu­ance of enforcemen­t activities around medical facilities.

Amy Zeidan is an Assistant Professor of Emergency Medicine at Emory University. She works as an ER physician at Grady Memorial Hospital and co-directors The Human Rights Clinic.

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