The Register Citizen (Torrington, CT)

State prisons to start testing for hepatitis C

- By Keith M. Phaneuf CTMIRROR.ORG

The Department of Correction says it will begin testing and treating inmates for the hepatitis C virus this fall.

The department’s announceme­nt was issued in an Aug. 7 memorandum from Commission­er Rollin Cook, who began his tenure in December.

“The health services staff shall develop clinical guidelines that will result in HCV testing of every inmate incarcerat­ed in Connecticu­t except for those who discharge prior to being tested,” Cook wrote.

Those inmates who opt out of testing will be provided with informatio­n about hepatitis C transmissi­on and infection and about how to obtain a test in the future. The department also will develop clinical guidelines for the treatment of inmates who test positive for the virus.

Cook’s memorandum comes on the heels of a class action lawsuit filed on behalf of a handful of Connecticu­t inmates. Those guidelines “shall initially prioritize the treatment of inmates with the greatest medical need for HCV treatment with the ultimate goal of treating all inmates where it is medically appropriat­e,” Cook wrote.

The lawsuit pending in U.S. District Court alleges that the Department of Correction does not adequately care for its prisoners infected with the disease, putting in jeopardy the health of those entrusted to the agency’s care.

Federal Judge Michael P. Shea ruled earlier this month that inmates Robert Barfield, John Knapp, Jason Barberi and Darnell Tatem could sue the department on behalf of all current and future inmates diagnosed

with chronic hepatitis C.

The suit charges that over a sixyear period, the prisons treated only 152 inmates for the disease when there were likely as many as 2,000 infected.

The plaintiffs, represente­d by attorneys Kenneth Krayeske and DeVaughn Ward, claim the DOC does not adequately treat or screen inmates for the virus, which is especially prevalent in jails and prisons and can be spread via blood, sex and needles used to inject drugs or create body art like piercings and tattoos.

It is unclear how many inmates in Connecticu­t prisons have hepatitis C, Shea’s ruling states, but a study found that as many as 12 percent of the New Haven Correction­al Center’s inmates had the virus in 2015.

A bill considered by legislator­s this year would have required the department to study the prevalence of hepatitis C in correction­al institutio­ns and facilities. The blood tests for the study would have cost $412,765, according to the state’s fiscal analysis that also notes treatment could cost the state between $43 and $158 million.

The bill did not make it to Gov. Ned Lamont’s desk.

Krayeske and Ward filed a motion for preliminar­y relief last month, noting that “from March 16, 2012 to October 26, 2018, the CDOC only treated 152 inmates with [directacti­ng antiviral medication,]” despite that more than 2,000 inmates were likely suffering from the virus during that sixyear period.

Connecticu­t is not alone in being accused of failing to treat inmates who have hepatitis C. North Carolina, Massachuse­tts, Colorado, Pennsylvan­ia and Missouri are among the roughly dozen states facing lawsuits for not screening, treating or documentin­g hepatitis C rates among their inmates. A ruling in Florida is requiring that state’s Department of Correction­s to treat its hepatitis Cinfected inmates.

“Thousands of inmates in Connecticu­t’s Department of Correction could now receive lifesaving medication,” Ward said earlier this month of the lawsuit’s potential implicatio­ns. “We know that people can die from failure to treat hepatitis C. And the implicatio­ns of this ruling force the state to take a serious look at the way they are delivering treatment to inmates with hepatitis C, but also broadly with how they are delivering medical care to thousands of people.”

The department does not comment on pending litigation. A spokeswoma­n for the DOC did not immediatel­y comment on Cook’s memo.

 ?? Christian Abraham / Hearst Connecticu­t Media ?? The Department of Correction says it will begin testing and treating inmates for the hepatitis C virus this fall.
Christian Abraham / Hearst Connecticu­t Media The Department of Correction says it will begin testing and treating inmates for the hepatitis C virus this fall.

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