The Norwalk Hour

Conn. inmates with virus banned from showering

- By Kelan Lyons

Inmates held in medical isolation or quarantine units in any of Connecticu­t’s 14 prisons or jails are temporaril­y prohibited from using their correction­al facility’s showers.

A memo issued on May 1 from a Department of Correction official states that showers in a Cheshire Correction­al Institutio­n housing unit are shut down until further notice. The note says, “This is a statewide department policy and is in place to prevent the transmissi­on of COVID-19,” and it applies to all who are housed in that unit, even after they have tested negative for the virus.

Karen Martucci, the department’s director of external affairs, confirmed the policy in an email. She said the Centers for Disease Control and Prevention’s recommenda­tions have guided the department’s policies since the onset of the pandemic.

“CDC guidelines speak to the increased risk for pathogen exposure and infection through aerosols. Knowing that showers, both hot and cold, produce aerosols and droplets, our current policy substitute­s showers for in-cell washing with a basin and appropriat­e hygiene supplies for the quarantine and isolation units only,” said Martucci. “Based on the unique challenges the congregate prison environmen­t presents, including an infrastruc­ture where showers and sleeping quarters are in the same room, we have acted with an abundance of caution when creating internal policy.”

The no-shower policy was already known for Northern Correction­al Institutio­n, where many COVID-19-positive inmates have been transferre­d since early April. An orientatio­n notice says that those who are held in Northern’s COVID units are not allowed to shower or have recreation time outside their cell. The sick are given hygiene products and a towel.

The May 1 memo extends that policy to medical isolation and quarantine units at prisons and jails other than Northern.

Martucci noted that the department has increased the CDC-suggested timeframe for transferri­ng an inmate who tested positive for COVID-19 back to general population housing. Incarcerat­ed people who have contracted the virus are not medically cleared until 14 days from the onset of symptoms, compared to the CDC recommenda­tion of 10 days.

That means the amount of time someone is in quarantine could be extended if a person spends a prolonged period of time in close contact with another inmate who has coronaviru­s symptoms — a viable possibilit­y in state correction­al facilities, given the difficulty of social distancing — so they could go more than two weeks without being able to bathe themselves beyond a cursory wash from within their cells.

“My concern is that the way quarantine works, it can be extended, and as I understand it, can keep being extended,” said Sen. Gary Winfield, D-New Haven, co-chair of the Judiciary Committee. “If they’re taking what amounts to a bird bath, that’s not the same as a full bathing.”

“During the COVID-19 pandemic, the issue of hygiene is of utmost importance,” Winfield added. “If for an extended period of time you cannot have access to full hygiene, it becomes problemati­c.”

Martucci said the department is continuous­ly revising its treatment and management plans as guidance from disease experts evolves. “All efforts are aimed at protecting the incarcerat­ed population and the employees that care for them.”

As of Tuesday, 526 inmates have tested positive for COVID-19. Six people have died.

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