Division of Infectious Diseases and Geographic Medicine, Department of Medicine, Stanford, CA, United States.
Cancer Biology Graduate Program, Stanford University School of Medicine, Stanford, CA, United States.
Front Public Health. 2022 Jun 14;10:854343. doi: 10.3389/fpubh.2022.854343. eCollection 2022.
Carceral facilities are high-risk settings for COVID-19 transmission. Little is known about the hidden burden of infection or practical barriers to infection control in these settings, especially in jails. There is also limited research on the mental health impacts of the pandemic among people living and working in carceral facilities.
Between July 8, 2020 and April 30, 2021, we performed SARS-CoV-2 rapid antibody testing and administered a questionnaire among residents and staff of four Northern California jails. We utilized multivariable logistic regression, adjusting for demographic and carceral characteristics, to analyze factors associated with prior infection, including perceived likelihood of prior infection and access to new masks. We additionally assessed the implementation of, perceptions toward, and impacts of COVID-19 policies in practice. We engaged stakeholder representatives, including incarcerated individuals, to guide study design, procedures, and results interpretation.
We enrolled 788 jail residents and 380 jail staff. Nearly half of residents and two-thirds of staff who were antibody-positive had not previously tested positive for COVID-19. Among residents without a prior COVID-19 diagnosis, antibody positivity was significantly associated with perceived likelihood of prior infection (adjusted OR = 8.9; 95% CI, 3.6-22.0). Residents who had flu-like illness in jail cited inadequate responses to reported illness and deterrents to symptom reporting, including fears of medical isolation and perceptions of medical neglect. Residents also disclosed deficient access to face masks, which was associated with antibody positivity (adjusted OR = 13.8, 95% CI, 1.8-107.0). Worsened mental health was pervasive among residents, attributed not only to fear of COVID-19 and unsanitary jail conditions but also to intensified isolation and deprivation due to pandemic restrictions on in-person visitation, programs, and recreation time.
Carceral settings present significant challenges to maintaining infection control and human rights. Custody officials should work diligently to transform the conditions of medical isolation, which could mitigate deterrents to symptom reporting. Furthermore, they should minimize use of restrictive measures like lockdowns and suspension of visitation that exacerbate the mental health harms of incarceration. Instead, custody officials should ensure comprehensive implementation of other preventive strategies like masking, testing, and vaccination, in conjunction with multisector efforts to advance decarceration.
监狱等监禁设施是 COVID-19 传播的高风险场所。在这些环境中,包括监狱,对于感染的隐性负担或感染控制的实际障碍,我们知之甚少,而对于在监禁设施中生活和工作的人来说,大流行对他们心理健康的影响的研究也很有限。
在 2020 年 7 月 8 日至 2021 年 4 月 30 日期间,我们对加利福尼亚州北部的四家监狱的居民和工作人员进行了 SARS-CoV-2 快速抗体检测,并进行了问卷调查。我们利用多变量逻辑回归,根据人口统计学和监禁特征进行调整,分析了与既往感染相关的因素,包括既往感染的可能性和获得新口罩的情况。我们还评估了 COVID-19 政策在实践中的实施、看法和影响。我们聘请了利益相关者代表,包括被监禁者,以指导研究设计、程序和结果解释。
我们招募了 788 名监狱居民和 380 名监狱工作人员。近一半抗体阳性的居民和三分之二的工作人员以前没有检测出 COVID-19 阳性。在没有 COVID-19 既往诊断的居民中,抗体阳性与既往感染的可能性显著相关(调整后的比值比=8.9;95%置信区间,3.6-22.0)。在监狱中出现流感样疾病的居民表示,对报告的疾病没有做出充分的反应,并且对报告症状存在阻碍,包括对医疗隔离的恐惧和对医疗忽视的看法。居民还透露,他们缺乏获得口罩的途径,这与抗体阳性有关(调整后的比值比=13.8,95%置信区间,1.8-107.0)。居民中普遍存在心理健康恶化的情况,这不仅归因于对 COVID-19 和监狱卫生条件不佳的恐惧,还归因于由于大流行限制了面对面探视、项目和娱乐时间,加剧了隔离和剥夺感。
监禁场所对维持感染控制和人权提出了重大挑战。监管官员应努力改变医疗隔离条件,以减轻对报告症状的阻碍。此外,他们应尽量减少使用像封锁和暂停探视这样的限制措施,因为这些措施会加剧监禁对心理健康的伤害。相反,监管官员应确保全面实施其他预防策略,如戴口罩、检测和接种疫苗,并与多部门合作,推进减少监禁。