The News-Times

Vaccine mandate doesn’t apply to prisons

Rules for state’s health workers seem inconsiste­nt

- By Kasturi Pananjady and Kelan Lyons

More than 600 employees at the Department of Correction may opt to test weekly in lieu of being vaccinated against COVID-19, a CT Mirror analysis has found, because the state is not requiring prison medical staff to apply for medical or religious exemptions.

That policy is inconsiste­nt with rules for the majority of health care workers at the department­s of Veteran’s Affairs, Children and Families, Mental Health and Addiction Services, and Developmen­tal Services.

About 3,700 workers at those agencies must have exemptions approved by the state if they want to test weekly instead of getting vaccinated, as per Gov. Ned Lamont’s executive order. The governor’s office confirmed that correction­al employees are not bound by this rule.

The administra­tion’s restrictiv­e mandate for most health care employees is similar to practices in private hospitals in Connecticu­t, which also require workers to apply for exemptions if they do not want to be vaccinated.

The governor’s vaccine mandate for long-term care facilities also requires staff to submit requests for medical and religious exemptions.

“That policy should be employed for correction­s,” said Arthur Caplan, professor of bioethics at New York University’s Grossman School of Medicine.

That would signal that “we mean business here, we’ve taken seriously the dangers that prisons and enclosed housing cause to the prisoners, the guards and the communitie­s where they’re located.”

Workers at state-run hospitals and long-term care facilities were required to get vaccinated — or submit exemption requests — before the governor’s vaccine mandate was expanded to other state employees, said Lora Rae Anderson, director of communicat­ions for the state’s chief operating officer.

“Those in hospitals and in long-term care facilities remained the most at risk throughout the pandemic, which is why the governor, in partnershi­p with hospitals across the state, acted swiftly to implement vaccinatio­n and testing requiremen­ts for those workers,” Anderson said in an emailed response to questions.

But Anderson estimated 1,850 health care workers in the executive branch weren’t included in either of those groups, around a third or a fourth of whom work at the Department of Correction.

When the governor issued his vaccinatio­n mandate for state employees more broadly, he allowed them to test weekly at-will if they did not want a shot. The state is covering the cost of weekly testing for unvaccinat­ed employees for the duration of the public health emergency, which presently extends though mid-February.

“We did not want to walk back those previous orders, so that’s why some folks are required to submit exemption requests, and others are not,” Anderson wrote. “Requiremen­ts for all state employees were made hand-in-hand with state employee unions, medical profession­als and agency leadership with safety as the highest priority.”

The state’s relationsh­ip with many advocates for the incarcerat­ed has been strained during the pandemic. Claudine Fox, public policy and advocacy director for the ACLU of Connecticu­t, which twice sued the state for its handling of COVID-19 in prisons and jails, said the “lax approach to vaccines for DOC health care workers only underscore­s the DOC’s cavalier attitude toward people’s health inside.”

Fox faulted what she called a “double standard” of having strict rules for medical workers in some health care settings but not others.

“Prisons are congregate living settings. If we’re treating certain congregate living settings one way, they need to all be treated the same way. People in prisons are people, and they deserve to be protected, too,” she said.

“This notion that providing health care in Connecticu­t’s prisons and jails is somehow different from other health care settings, again, just demonstrat­es how people see prisons, and people in prisons, as completely different from the rest of society.”

More than 280 prisoners had tested positive for the virus as of Dec. 7. If the numbers continue to increase, advocates worry the prison system will rely on isolation to contain an outbreak, as officials did with the state’s youth prison, which was placed on partial lockdown on Nov. 19.

Just over 5,000 incarcerat­ed people have been vaccinated against the virus, a number equivalent to about 52 percent of the number of people in prisons and jails as of Dec. 8.

The governor’s office makes public department­level data for executive branch agencies with more than 100 employees, and the Department of Correction has the lowest vaccinatio­n rate among them at 65 percent, according to data published Nov. 22.

It also has the highest rates of testing and noncomplia­nce, the Mirror previously reported.

A CT Mirror analysis of Office of State Comptrolle­r data from December 2021 found 667 medical staff employed at the Department of Correction, including nurses, physicians, psychiatri­sts, clinical social workers and medical records specialist­s.

The agency had about 5,400 employees total in November, according to the governor’s office.

The governor’s office would not break out vaccinatio­n, testing and noncomplia­nce rates for health care workers within the Department of Correction. The Department of Correction referred questions to the governor’s office.

In a statement, Karen Martucci, the Department of Correction’s director of external affairs, said the agency’s job is to “ensure compliance with the executive order as it relates to the Department of Correction.”

The governor’s office does break out vaccinatio­n and testing data for medical staff who are required to submit exemption requests. Those health care workers generally reported slightly higher rates of vaccinatio­n and slightly lower rates of testing than other employees within the same agency, November data show.

The state had approved the vast majority of exemption requests it had adjudicate­d last month, the Mirror previously reported.

It’s likely that health care workers within the Department of Correction also have higher vaccinatio­n rates than the department­al average, but that doesn’t mean a more restrictiv­e mandate couldn’t have pushed those rates even higher, Caplan said.

“That’s the place I would start in order to try and drive more responsibl­e behavior on the part of the correction­s side of the street.”

All correction­al staff should have to apply for exemptions to test in lieu of vaccinatio­n, not just health care workers, Caplan added.

In general, “mandates are extraordin­arily effective at increasing uptake. You only have to look as far as any health care facility to see that mandates do work,” said Jaimie Meyer, a Yale School of Medicine infectious disease physician and epidemiolo­gist who focuses on prisons.

“And they do work also in terms of preventing future outbreaks,” which is important in correction­al facilities because “people who are forced to reside (in prisons) and people who work in this business often have underlying medical conditions that put them at increased risk of severe disease,” she said.

Data released in December show that onein-four incarcerat­ed individual­s are over the age of 45, and 5 percent are over the age of 60.

Caplan argued that weekly testing was insufficie­nt, advocating for daily testing instead.

Vaccinatio­n and testing serve different purposes when it comes to infection control, Meyer said. Testing helps with the identifica­tion of carriers of disease, particular­ly those who are asymptomat­ic, whereas vaccinatio­n is “really the most effective tool that we have to … prevent infection, to reduce the risk of transmissi­on and to prevent severe disease in this highly vulnerable population.”

Testing “is a strategy to prevent an outbreak inside a facility. It’s not an alternativ­e to vaccinatio­n,” Meyer said.

 ?? Cloe Poisson / CTMirror.org ?? Prison medical staff are not required to obtain an exemption if they choose not be vaccinated against COVID-19 and are instead allowed to test weekly while they continue working. Above, syringes filled with the Moderna COVID-19 vaccine.
Cloe Poisson / CTMirror.org Prison medical staff are not required to obtain an exemption if they choose not be vaccinated against COVID-19 and are instead allowed to test weekly while they continue working. Above, syringes filled with the Moderna COVID-19 vaccine.

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