Pittsburgh Post-Gazette

Incentive plan for inmates boosts vaccinatio­n rates at 2 state prisons

- By Joseph Darius Jaafari and Jamie Martines

HARRISBURG — Early in January, Angelo Romero sat in his cell at SCI-Smithfield and thought that there would be no way people incarcerat­ed, like himself, would get the COVID-19 vaccine.

“The inmates don’t stand a chance on being vaccinated if it’s going to cost the [Department of

Correction­s] money,” he wrote in a letter to Spotlight PA.

But to Romero’s surprise — along with prisoners’ rights advocates, public health experts, and even other inmates — the opposite has happened.

Three out of the state’s 23 prisons have so far offered vaccines to inmates and staff, and the number of inmates who have gotten the vaccine at two of those facilities is upward of 70% — no small feat for a department that, on average, vaccinates just over a quarter of its population for the flu.

One of the reasons why that could be happening? Money.

As part of an incentive program, the department is offering

inmates a $25 commissary credit to buy clothing, food or other items after they receive both their initial and booster shots. While some experts caution against incentiviz­ing people to get vaccines — arguing the health and social benefits are selfappare­nt — in close quarters such as prisons, the need to stem the pandemic is the top priority.

Heather Lavelle, who is incarcerat­ed at SCI-Muncy, the state’s all-female prison north of Lewisburg, received her first dose on March 1 in the prison chapel. Lavelle was skeptical, at first, that the money would persuade people to get their shots.

“I knew a lot of people who were suspicious ... like they were trying to coerce us into getting it,” Lavelle said. “But as it turns out, it did encourage some people to get it who had no good reason not to.”

The department also recruited people like Lavelle, who is a peer counselor at Muncy, to dispel rumors about the COVID-19 vaccine’s safety to other inmates. Correction­s officers got their shots in front of entire rooms of prisoners.

Since then, at least two facilities, Laurel Highlands and Muncy, have vaccinated up to 73% of their incarcerat­ed population­s, according to the department. It’s unclear what the vaccinatio­n percentage is at Waymart, which is the third prison to have received vaccines.

The program is a replica of the department’s attempt to incentiviz­e prisoners to get the flu vaccine in September last year.

Between 2017 and 2019, 26% to 28% of the state’s inmates would get their flu shots. In October last year, when the department offered a $5 incentive to inmates, 48.1% of the incarcerat­ed population got the flu vaccine, according to numbers provided by the department.

Both incentive-based efforts were unpreceden­ted in Pennsylvan­ia and among just a few nationwide. The money for them was drawn from the Inmate General Welfare Fund, which is generated by fines and fees paid by inmates — not taxpayer funds.

Effectiven­ess varies

Incentive programs have been used elsewhere, as well.

The state offers extra paid time off for some employees, like those represente­d by American Federation of State, County, and Municipal Employees Council 13, which is a union that includes independen­t agencies as well as the Pennsylvan­ia State System of Higher Education and Pennsylvan­ia Higher Education Assistance Agency. They receive up to six hours of leave — three for each dose — in return for getting vaccinated, according to spokespers­on Jennifer George.

Not all of the efforts pay off, however.

Officials in Northampto­n County used federal CARES Act money to offer workers at the county-run Gracedale Nursing Home a $750 bonus to get vaccinated. Gracedale was the site of one of the biggest COVID-19 outbreaks at a long-term care facility in the state, with 99 deaths and 419 resident cases, and 154 staff cases, according to Health Department data.

When the incentive program concluded in February, the county paid out $224,250, but only about 48% of staff at the facility, which has 624 employees, had received the vaccine, according to figures provided by the county. A spokespers­on said officials were not allowed to ask staff why they opted out due to medical privacy laws.

Even though such programs are becoming increasing­ly common, it is unclear whether it’s the money that actually motivates more people to get vaccinated — and some experts warn that offering a monetary incentive could backfire.

Unlike benefits that coincide with receiving the vaccine, such as being able to socialize or go to work, offering people money might deter them, said George Loewenstei­n, a professor of economics and psychology at Carnegie Mellon University.

“With the monetary incentive, it conveys the opposite: This is something that you very well might not think is in your self-interest to do, but we’re trying to compensate for that with monetary payment,” Mr. Loewenstei­n said.

Jessica Fishman, a behavioral scientist at the University of Pennsylvan­ia, is running a study to measure how different messages — comparing incentives versus other prompts that only provide vaccine safety and efficacy informatio­n — influence whether people are more likely to get a vaccine.

In prisons, the Pennsylvan­ia Department of Correction­s houses up to four people in cells the size of a bathroom — spaces that are ripe for spreading the coronaviru­s that causes COVID-19. Vaccinatio­ns are the best way to avoid further outbreaks, public health experts said, so the benefits of incentive programs outweigh potential drawbacks.

“Definitely the overriding principle and goal is to make it so that people can get vaccinated. Reducing barriers and making it easy for them is critical,” said Joseph Amon, the director of the Office of Global Health at Drexel University and a specialist in prison care. “I think it’s a great example for other states to see that this works.”

At least one other state, North Carolina, is running an incentive program in its state prisons.

Instead of money, those who choose to get vaccinated receive five days off their sentence if they are eligible, four additional visits with clergy or family, a free 10-minute phone call, and the opportunit­y to return to work or programmin­g early, said John Bull, spokespers­on for the North Carolina Department of Public Safety.

North Carolina’s prison system reports that since Jan. 20, about 10% of the state’s roughly 29,000 inmates across 55 state prisons have received at least one dose of the vaccine, though it’s unclear what effect the incentives have had.

Incomplete data

Still, there are some Pennsylvan­ia inmates, such as Romero, who won’t ever trust getting the vaccine from prison officials.

“I have never [taken] the flu shot in my 24 years of being incarcerat­ed and never will,” said Romero, the inmate who was incarcerat­ed at Smithfield. “I just don’t trust the system.

It’s too early to fully gauge the success of vaccine programs in Pennsylvan­ia’s prisons because of limited data. In January, the Department of Correction­s admitted that its coronaviru­s data was seriously flawed in response to a fivemonth analysis by Spotlight PA.

The department removed its tracking data online and promised a new dashboard by March 1. But that release, which would include tracking of vaccine numbers, has been postponed, with officials citing technical difficulti­es. They have not set a new date.

“We have a complete blackout right now on testing data. We don’t know how many tests are being done or what the positivity rate of those tests are,” said Sean Damon, organizing director at the Amistad Law Project, a civil rights legal group for prisoners. “Similarly, we don’t know the percentage of people who have been vaccinated.”

And outbreaks continue among the state’s 20 remaining facilities that have not had access to vaccines yet.

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 ?? Pennsylvan­ia Department of Correction­s ?? The Pennsylvan­ia Department of Correction­s is offering $25 in commissary credit to inmates who get the COVID-19 vaccine. The incentive program has seen promising results.
Pennsylvan­ia Department of Correction­s The Pennsylvan­ia Department of Correction­s is offering $25 in commissary credit to inmates who get the COVID-19 vaccine. The incentive program has seen promising results.

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