Santa Fe New Mexican

Virus cases rise sharply in prisons across U.S.

Deaths among inmates also surging upward even as national rate declines

- By Timothy Williams, Libby Seline and Rebecca Griesbach

Cases of the coronaviru­s in prisons and jails across the United States have soared in recent weeks, even as the overall daily infection rate in the nation has remained relatively flat.

The number of prison inmates known to be infected has doubled during the past month to more than 68,000. Prison deaths tied to the coronaviru­s have also risen, by 73 percent since mid-May. By now, the five largest known clusters of the virus in the United States are not at nursing homes or meatpackin­g plants, but inside correction institutio­ns, according to data the New York Times has been collecting about confirmed coronaviru­s cases since the pandemic reached U.S. shores.

And the risk of more cases appears imminent: The swift growth in virus cases behind bars comes as demonstrat­ors arrested as part of large police brutality protests have often been placed in crowded holding cells in local jails.

A muddled, uneven response by correction­s officials to testing and care for inmates and workers is complicati­ng the spread of the coronaviru­s. In interviews, prison and jail officials acknowledg­ed their approach largely has been based on trial and error, and an effective, consistent response for U.S. correction­al facilities remains elusive.

“If there was clearly a right strategy, we all would have done it,” said Dr. Owen Murray, a University of Texas Medical Branch physician who oversees correction­al health care at dozens of Texas prisons. “There is no clear-cut right strategy here. There are a lot of different

choices that one could make that are going to be in-the-moment decisions.”

Public officials have long warned that the nation’s correction­al facilities would likely become vectors in the pandemic because they are often overcrowde­d, unsanitary places where social distancing is impractica­l, bathrooms and day rooms are shared by hundreds of inmates, and access to cleaning supplies is tightly controlled. Many inmates are 60 or older, and many suffer from respirator­y illnesses or heart conditions.

In response, local jails have discharged thousands of inmates since February, many of whom had been awaiting trials to have charges heard or serving time for nonviolent crimes. State prison systems, where people convicted of more serious crimes are housed, have been more reluctant to release inmates.

Testing for the virus within the nation’s penal institutio­ns varies widely and has become a matter of significan­t debate.

Republican-led states like Texas, Tennessee and Arkansas — which generally spend less on prisoners than the national average — have found themselves at the forefront of testing inmates.

In Texas, the number of prisoners and staff members known to be infected has more than quadrupled to 7,900 during the past three weeks after the state began to test every inmate.

Yet states that typically spend far more on prisons have carried out significan­tly less testing.

California, which spends

$12 billion annually on its prison system, has tested fewer than 7 percent of inmates in several of its largest, most crowded facilities, according to the state’s data. Other Democratic-led states that also spend heavily on prisons, including New York, Oregon and Colorado, have also conducted limited testing despite large outbreaks in their facilities.

New York has tested about 3 percent of its 40,000 prison inmates; more than 40 percent of those tested were infected.

Critics say that the dearth of testing in some facilities has meant that prison and public health officials have only vague notions about the spread of the virus, which has allowed some elected officials to suggest that it is not present at all.

“We have really no true idea of how bad the problem is because most places are not yet testing the way they should,” said Dr. Homer Venters, who served as chief medical officer for the New York City jail system and now works

for a group called Community Oriented Correction­al Health Services, which works to improve health care services in local jails. “I think a lot of times some of the operationa­l challenges of either not having adequate quarantine policies or adequate medical isolation policies are so vexing that places simply decide that they can just throw up their hands.”

Most state prison systems have conducted few tests. Systems in Illinois, Mississipp­i and Alabama have tested fewer than 2.5 percent of inmates. And in Louisiana, officials had tested several dozen of its 31,000 inmates in March when the warden and medical director at one of the state’s largest prisons died of the coronaviru­s. The state has since announced plans to test every inmate.

Prison officials in states where only a limited number of inmates have been tested say they are following federal guidelines. The Centers for Disease Control and Prevention recommend that only prisoners with symptoms be tested.

Prisons that have conducted mass testing have found that about 1 in 7 tests of inmates has come back positive, the Times database shows. The vast majority of inmates who have tested positive have been asymptomat­ic.

Public health officials say that indicates the virus has been present in prison population­s for far longer than had previously been understood.

“If you don’t do testing, you’re flying blind,” said Carlos Franco-Paredes, an infectious-disease specialist at the University of Colorado School of Medicine.

But in California, there continues to be reluctance to test each of the state’s 114,000 inmates, despite growing criticism to take

a more aggressive approach. One in 6 inmates in the state’s prisons has been tested, and the state has released some inmates who were later found to have the virus, raising fears that prison systems could seed new infections outside penal institutio­ns.

“Nothing significan­t had been done to protect those most vulnerable to the virus,” said Marie Waldron, the Republican minority leader of the California State Assembly.

But J. Clark Kelso, who oversees prison health care in California, said mass testing would provide only a snapshot of the virus’s spread.

“Testing’s not a complete solution,” Kelso said. “It gives you better informatio­n, but you don’t want to get a false sense of security.”

Instead, California has employed surveillan­ce testing, which involves testing a limited number of inmates at each state prison regardless of the known infection rate.

That method, Kelso said, had led officials to conclude that the vast majority of its prisons are free of the virus.

“We’re not 100 percent confident because we’re not testing everyone,” he said. “As we learn every single day from what we’re doing, we may suddenly decide, ‘No, we actually have to test all of them.’ We’re not at that point yet.”

In interviews, California prison inmates say prison staff have sometimes refused to test them, even after they complained about symptoms similar to the coronaviru­s. Several prisoners said they had been too weak to move for weeks at a time but were never permitted to see a nurse and had never been tested.

“I had chest pains. I couldn’t breathe,” said Althea Housley, 43,

an inmate at Folsom State Prison, where no inmates have tested positive, according to state data. “They told us it was the flu going around, but I ain’t never had a flu like that.”

In New Mexico, the coronaviru­s continues to spread inside the Otero County Prison Facility on the state’s southern border. State health officials on Tuesday reported the facility had three new cases among inmates, bringing its total number of infected state and federal prisoners to 573.

Gov. Michelle Lujan Grisham has blamed the federal government for the outbreak in Otero County, saying it didn’t implement safeguards quickly enough in the part of the prison where federal inmates are held to prevent it from spreading to the prison’s state inmates.

 ??  ??

Newspapers in English

Newspapers from United States