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Managing COVID-19 outbreaks in prisons – a brief review of literature and key lessons learnt

Lin Guo (Department of Public Health, Kent County Council, Maidstone, UK)
Padmanabhan Badrinath (Padmanabhan Badrinath is a Freelance Consultant in Public Health Medicine, Colchester, UK and Directorate of Public Health, Stoke-on-Trent City Council, Stoke-on-Trent, UK)
Jessica Mookherjee (Department of Public Health, Kent County Council, Maidstone, UK)
Anjan Ghosh (Department of Public Health, Kent County Council, Maidstone, UK)
Edyta McCallum (Department of Public Health, Kent County Council, Maidstone, UK)
Nirosha Dissanayake (Department of Public Health, Kent County Council, Maidstone, UK)
Abraham George (Department of Public Health, Kent County Council, Maidstone, UK)

International Journal of Prison Health

ISSN: 2977-0254

Article publication date: 17 October 2024

Issue publication date: 5 December 2024

30

Abstract

Purpose

During the COVID-19 pandemic, prisons faced a unique challenge of preventing and managing outbreaks with minimal adverse impact. This study aims to describe the epidemiology of COVID-19 in prisons, identify lessons learnt and make recommendations.

Design/methodology/approach

The authors used the PubMed advanced search function using MeSH terms; (coronavirus, sars) AND (prisons) AND (disease outbreaks). The authors included original research reporting COVID-19 outbreaks in prisons. All other types and non-English publications were excluded. The authors used a structured data abstraction template to extract data systematically, and a second author independently abstracted data from 10% of the papers for quality assurance.

Findings

The search yielded 96 hits. The authors included 15 studies meeting the inclusion criteria. These studies were from four countries. Seven studies reported individual outbreaks. The mean and median number of inmates and staff were 1,765, 1,126 and 575, 510. The mean and median number of cases among inmates and staff were 584, 464, and 72, 77. The number of reported deaths varied from 0 to 11. The authors present the prison-specific hazards grouped under human factors, healthcare factors and environmental factors. The authors also summarise interventions deployed as either primary prevention interventions, such as vaccinations, or secondary prevention interventions, including screening and contact tracing.

Originality/value

This narrative review summarises the prison-specific hazards, which include movement of people in and out of the person, moving in new prisoners from other prisons, mixing of prisoners when transporting to courts, limited medical and isolation resources, crowded dormitories, shared lavatories, small communal facilities, poor ventilation and overcrowding. The interventions included limiting non-medical transfers into and out of the persons, assigning staff members to specific areas, encouraging face coverings among prisoners and staff and social isolation measures within the constraints of the prison setting. The interventions were adopted by prison authorities to contain and manage the outbreaks. Public Health and prison authorities need to be aware of the risk of further outbreaks of COVID-19 and other infectious diseases in these settings and implement key measures identified in this review to minimise adverse outcomes.

Keywords

Citation

Guo, L., Badrinath, P., Mookherjee, J., Ghosh, A., McCallum, E., Dissanayake, N. and George, A. (2024), "Managing COVID-19 outbreaks in prisons – a brief review of literature and key lessons learnt", International Journal of Prison Health, Vol. 20 No. 4, pp. 410-421. https://doi.org/10.1108/IJOPH-08-2023-0049

Publisher

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Emerald Publishing Limited

Copyright © 2024, Emerald Publishing Limited

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