The Reporter (Lansdale, PA)

State prison COVID data hiding truth

Pennsylvan­ia’s Department of Correction­s is apparently doing such an effective job in its coronaviru­s response that it’s bringing people felled by the disease back to life.

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Behind every number is a life, and far too many are being lost in prison during this pandemic.

On Dec. 21, DOC’s COVID-19 Dashboard showed that the number of people incarcerat­ed who died of the coronaviru­s in Pennsylvan­ia’s state prisons was 65. The next day, that number went down to 58.

But it wasn’t a Christmas miracle. It was just the latest and most egregious example of data errors and lack of transparen­cy by the DOC on the coronaviru­s behind prison walls.

On the same date that seven fatalities disappeare­d from the data, so did nearly 25,000 tests, 11,000 of which were positive. The number of people who recovered also went down from 10,103 to 2,584.

The unexplaine­d change in data wasn’t the first time, nor the first discrepanc­y.

The dashboard for Dec. 14 showed that a person incarcerat­ed in State Correction­al Institutio­n Forest had died of the coronaviru­s. However, in a press release last week, DOC announced that the first death at SCI Forest was on Dec. 22.

Philadelph­ia’s Amistad Law Project found multiple instances in which the reported number of positive cases went down in specific prisons, without explanatio­n.

On at least two occasions, the Pennsylvan­ia Department of Correction­s reduced the number of people incarcerat­ed who have died from coronaviru­s in prison without explanatio­n.

According to a DOC spokespers­on, there was a “system glitch” on the 21st that led to an erroneous report of cases and deaths. Other tests were removed because of a deliberate change — in cases when there was both a positive rapid test and lab test for the same person, for example, the dashboard reported two positives.

Since the 24th, the dashboard reports individual positive cases.

The early SCI Forest death on the dashboard was an input error.

Data errors happen. But for data to be trustworth­y, changes need to be transparen­t. The change in how tests are counted was not explained publicly. The language on the dashboard was not updated. It is also unclear if the dashboard data before and after the change is comparable — making analysis of trends unreliable.

Tracking trends is key. From mid-March to mid-October, 11 people incarcerat­ed died of COVID in prison. In the months since, another 51 died.

The data is particular­ly important because it is one of few windows into the state’s prisons. Since March, visitation­s were canceled, though the capacity for video calls has increased. Family members have minimal ability to assess the risk to their incarcerat­ed loved ones.

Last week, Spotlight PA reported on family members who weren’t informed by DOC on their loved one’s severe COVID-19 illness or death.

Claire Shubik-Richards of the Pennsylvan­ia Prison Society says that the issue with the COVID-19 dashboard is just one manifestat­ion of an inability to track basic issues, including who is incarcerat­ed and why.

Case in point: When Gov. Tom Wolf instituted a reprieve program in April as part of the coronaviru­s effort, DOC estimated that 1,200 people would be eligible. The true eligible pool was much smaller, and fewer than 200 actually received reprieve.

If the Pennsylvan­ia DOC can’t be accurate and transparen­t about its data, it sheds doubt on its ability to be transparen­t about how it’s handling COVID-19. Behind every number is a life, and far too many are being lost in prison during this pandemic.

The unexplaine­d change in data wasn’t the first time, nor the first discrepanc­y.

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