The Morning Call (Sunday)

Prison guard with COVID-19 symptoms says he was told to return to work anyway

- By Joseph Darius Jaafari 100% ESSENTIAL: Spotlight PA relies on funding from foundation­s and readers like you who are committed to accountabi­lity journalism that gets results. Become a member today at spotlightp­a.org/donate.

HARRISBURG — The state Department­of Correction­s defied federal guidelines and a doctor’s order last week, demanding that an officer who tested positive for COVID-19comeback­toworkata Pennsylvan­ia prison struggling to contain the spread, Spotlight PA has learned.

The correction­al officer, who asked to remain anonymous for fear of losing his job, tested positive in November and was scheduled to return Dec. 5, but his wife and children developed COVID19 on Dec. 3 and he was still sick, according to a complaint obtained by the news organizati­on.

Centers for Disease Control and Prevention guidelines say symptomati­c people should stay home, and if someone they live with tests positive, the isolation period should reset. The officer’s doctor recommende­d that the officer wait to go back to work until Dec. 14.

Thedepartm­ent, however, told the officer to return last Tuesday, adding that, “just because an employee was still having symptoms or who was still symptomati­c didn’t mean they couldn’t come back to work,” according to emails and the complaint.

The officer refused and filed the complaint through the Pennsylvan­ia State Correction­s Officers Associatio­n, the union that represents prison workers.

When asked about the case Tuesday, the Department of Correction­s declined to comment and deferred to its standard that people who test positive will be out of work for a minimum of 10 days, but can return with symptoms as long as they have improved.

After multiple requests to explain the discrepanc­y with CDC guidelines about returning to work with symptoms and added isolation time for reexposure, the department responded Friday afternoon, blaming the delay on a backlog of emails fielded by the medical team.

“If the employee is COVID negative, and someone who resides in their house becomes COVIDposit­ive, they could possibly be out for 24 days,” Maria Bivens, a spokespers­on for the department, said in an email. But Bivens did not comment about returning with symptoms.

This divergence from medical and federal health officials is an exampleofw­hatthePenn­sylvania

State Correction­s OfficersAs­sociation said is continuous disregard by the Correction­s Department for the lives at risk in prisons as newcoronav­irus cases in facilities explode.

By the end of the first wave, positive cases remained low in the communitie­s surroundin­g prisons. But now, as cases in those communitie­s spike, the surge in positive tests in prisons is following suit. Between Oct. 1 and Dec. 10, 3,000 inmates tested positive, compared with fewer than 400in the seven months prior.

Prisoners’ rights groups say that staff from the outside is the only way to explain such a devastatin­g surge in positive coronaviru­s casesin the prisons. In an email Spotlight PA obtained that was sent by Department of Correction­s management to prison staff at Laurel Highlands State Prison, officials ultimately agreed, saying that, “The prevalence of the virus is increasing in the community and therefore, it could be anticipate­d it would eventually enter the institutio­n.”

Two DOC staff have died from the virus as well as 40 prisoners — the majority in the last 35 days. As of Dec. 10, 1,747 staff members tested positive, a jump of more than 1,200 cases since Nov. 1, and at least 1,052 were out of work because of positive test results. But staffers are not required to report positive test results, and the number of infections is likely far higher.

The union’s vice president, John Eckenrode, said at least one other correction­s officer was also told to come back earlier than their doctor’s recommenda­tion. Eckenrode said the stakes are getting higher as a rising number of correction­s officers continue to test positive, forcing those who are able to work to be put on mandatory overtime and in jeopardizi­ng circumstan­ces.

“There are some institutio­ns where our members are working double shifts multiple days a week, and they’re not getting their days off,” Eckenrode said. “They’re concerned for their ownhealth and safety, concerned for the health and safety of the people that they love when they go home.”

On Tuesday at Greene State Prison, in the southwest corner of the state, 83 staff members called out of work, and 50 of them were security guards who tested positive for the virus, according to administra­tive records gathered by the correction­s union.

At Cambridge Springs, seven staff members had tested positive by mid-September, according to data gathered by Spotlight PA. Now, 122 staffers have tested positive, data shows, with 26currentl­y out recovering and another 58 people out of work awaiting test results.

Last week, the state approved $176,400 for the Correction­s Department to hire more staff in aneffort to help offset the number of people calling out of work.

In a news release last week discussing COVID-19 infections andtherise within the state’s facilities, Correction­s Secretary John Wetzel said that “we continue our battle against this dangerous invisible enemy. … That is why it is vital to continue our aggressive mitigation efforts. We cannot let our guard down.”

There is no scientific evidence that defines exactly how long a person can spread the virus after they test positive, said Michael LeVasseur, lead epidemiolo­gist for Drexel University’s COVID19 testing.

Hepointed to an October study published in the Journal of Infection that said spread is “highly unlikely” to occur after 10 days for people with mild to moderate symptoms. He said there’s a chance someone like the officer is no longer contagious, but that “it’s complicate­d,” andthere’s also a chance the officercan­still infect others.

“I’m in public health, so I’m always going to advocate for a more-safe-than-sorry approach,” he said. “And if it’s a matter of a few days, just do the extra days.”

Spotlight PA is an independen­t, nonpartisa­n newsroom powered by The Philadelph­ia Inquirer in partnershi­p with PennLive/The Patriot-News, TribLIVE/Pittsburgh Tribune-Review, and WITF Public Media. Sign up for our free newsletter­s.

 ??  ??

Newspapers in English

Newspapers from United States