The Day

Weeks in, DOC has vaccinated 10% of inmates, 40% of staff

Department says it used all shots it has received, rates comparable to other states

- By KELAN LYONS The Connecticu­t Mirror Kelan Lyons is a reporter for The Connecticu­t Mirror (www. ctmirror.org). Copyright 2021 © The Connecticu­t Mirror. klyons@ctmirror.org

Three weeks into the Department of Correction’s vaccinatio­ns of the incarcerat­ed population, 837 inmates — less than 10% of the 9,034 people in prisons and jails as of Feb. 22 — have received the first dose of the COVID-19 vaccine.

The department received another 500 doses Tuesday morning. Department Director of External Affairs Karen Martucci said the DOC has used all of the shots it has received and is seeking more. “We roll them out as they come in,” she said.

The DOC began vaccinatin­g the 27 incarcerat­ed individual­s age 75 or older in early February and then began vaccinatin­g people between the ages of 65 and 74.

“Currently, we are offering a number of vaccines at different locations — Osborn, Willard-Cybulski, MacDougall-Walker, Cheshire, Corrigan-Radgowski, Garner and York,” Martucci said in an email. “We are not vaccinatin­g an entire prison in one shot to avoid overburden­ing our medical staff that may have to tend to those experienci­ng side effects. We started with inmates assigned to the medical units and then went unit to unit from there.”

Almost 350 incarcerat­ed people have refused the vaccine. Martucci said the department will circle back to those who declined a shot later on, suggesting they may change their mind once more of their peers are vaccinated.

The vaccine rollout rate among prisoners is slightly below the rate among the general population, according to state data. About 13% of the general population, and about 62% of 75-and-older residents, have received at least a first dose.

But Kathy Flaherty, executive director of Connecticu­t Legal Rights Project Inc., criticized the pace of the deployment. “These folks should have been vaccinated when they vaccinated patients in nursing homes,” she said. “I believe that these congregate facilities pose the same risk as people in nursing homes, and should have been prioritize­d similarly. That was a population that was within the state’s care and custody, that they literally have responsibi­lity for.”

Considerin­g the racial disparitie­s in the incarcerat­ed population, vaccinatio­ns will disproport­ionately benefit racial and ethnic minorities. As of Feb. 1, about 72% of people in prisons and jails were Black or Hispanic.

The department has continued its heavy use of mass testing of the incarcerat­ed population, Martucci said. The recent results have been positive: the positivity rate for the past two rounds has been 1%, she said.

The agency’s three-week vaccinatio­n clinic for correction­s staff ended Monday. Commission­er Designate Angel Quiros said in his confirmati­on hearing in January that less than half of the 5,400 correction­s staff planned on getting the vaccine. That projection proved largely accurate: about 41% of correction­s staff got their first dose of the inoculatio­n during the clinic.

Martucci said the vaccinatio­n rate among staff was comparable with correction­s systems in other states.

The department’s figures on vaccinatio­n compliance among staff is based on figures from the DOC’s clinics, Martucci said; it does not include staff who chose instead to get vaccinated at community sites or local health districts. She said there were no plans to reopen first-dose clinics for correction­s staff, but they could get the first dose once their age bracket is eligible.

The DOC isn’t the only state agency in charge of congregate settings that hasn’t finished vaccinatin­g its residents. The Department of Mental Health and Addiction Services had provided vaccines to 27% of its 491 people receiving inpatient treatment at its facilities.

“We are not vaccinatin­g an entire prison in one shot to avoid overburden­ing our medical staff that may have to tend to those experienci­ng side effects. We started with inmates assigned to the medical units and then went unit to unit from there.”

KAREN MARTUCCI, DIRECTOR OF EXTERNAL AFFAIRS CONNECTICU­T DEPARTMENT OF CORRECTION

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