Medicine Hat News

Advocates say inmates should get speedy access to vaccine

-

Advocates say inmates should have speedy access to the COVID-19 vaccine, given how susceptibl­e prisons and jails have been to outbreaks and how prevalent chronic disease is in that population.

“I don’t think they should go to the front of the line, but I certainly don’t think they should be denied their rightful place in the priority line simply because they’re prisoners,” said Catherine Latimer, executive director of the John Howard Society of Canada.

The Correction­al Service of Canada said that, as of Tuesday, there were a total of 276 active COVID-19 cases in federal prisons. The bulk were at Joyceville Institutio­n near Kingston, Ont., Stony Mountain Institutio­n near Winnipeg and the Saskatchew­an Penitentia­ry near Prince Albert, Sask.

There have also been several outbreaks in provincial­ly run jails.

Martha Paynter, a registered nurse in Halifax who advocates for the health of people behind bars, said hygiene and ventilatio­n in correction­al institutio­ns are issues at the best of times.

There is also high turnover in remand centres and staff are constantly coming and going, she added.

Inmates are “living in this incredibly restrictiv­e experience, but also facing very grave risk of illness transmissi­on,” said Paynter, a doctoral candidate at Dalhousie University.

Inmates 50 and older account for onequarter of the federal prison population. Advocates note people age faster behind bars and are in poorer health than the general public.

“Of course this population should have very quick access to the vaccines,” said Paynter, who added that some might not trust the shots due to bad experience­s with health care behind bars.

She said the bigger issue is why there are so many people incarcerat­ed in the first place.

“What are we choosing to police? What are we choosing to criminaliz­e?”

Anita Ho, associate professor in bioethics and health services research at the University of British Columbia, noted Indigenous people are disproport­ionately represente­d in the correction­s system.

“In general, health among Indigenous peoples in Canada, because of various social determinan­ts of health, are poorer to start with,” she said.

The National Advisory Committee on Immunizati­ons recommends adult Indigenous communitie­s be included in Stage 1 of vaccine delivery. It recommends congregate settings, including correction­al facilities, be included in Stage 2.

The Correction­al Service of Canada, which is responsibl­e for providing health services for inmates in its care, says in a statement it is aligning its strategy with the national guidelines.

“CSC has worked very closely with the Public Health Agency of Canada to respond to every aspect of the pandemic, including the provision of vaccines to inmates.”

Priority groups such as long-term care residents and health-care workers began receiving doses earlier this month.

Dr. Joss Reimer, medical health officer for the Winnipeg Regional Health Authority, said criteria for who gets the vaccine in Manitoba in the new year will be expanded to include “correction­al facilities,” but did not specify whether that would be inmates, staff or both.

Other provinces have not detailed their plans.

Ontario’s Ministry of the Solicitor General said it will be looking at the availabili­ty of doses and would carry out immunizati­ons “based on the latest medical advice and scientific evidence.”

Saskatchew­an Health Minister Paul Merriman said: “We will consider based on what the needs are at that specific time and ... the amount of vaccines that we have flowing into the province.”

In Alberta, chief medical health officer Dr. Deena Hinshaw said, “We’ll have a clear ethical dimension that we need to make sure we’re considerin­g.”

University of Toronto bioethicis­t Kerry Bowman said there was a consensus about who would receive the first batch of vaccines, but determinin­g who should be next is trickier.

He said it’s not clear whether the goal of the second phase will be to boost the economy or to reach more vulnerable people.

Newspapers in English

Newspapers from Canada