Department of Epidemiology and Prevention Science, Johns Hopkins Bloomberg School of Public Health, Baltimore, MD, United States.
Department of Health, Behavior and Society, Johns Hopkins Bloomberg School of Public Health, Baltimore, MD, United States.
Front Public Health. 2023 Jul 20;11:1217857. doi: 10.3389/fpubh.2023.1217857. eCollection 2023.
People incarcerated during the COVID-19 pandemic face higher vulnerability to infection due to structural and social factors in carceral settings. Additionally, due to the higher prevalence of chronic health conditions among carceral populations, they are also at risk for more severe COVID-19 disease. This study was designed to explore the experiences of people incarcerated in prisons and jails in Maryland during the height of the pandemic.
We conducted semi-structured phone interviews between January 2021 and April 2022 with ten individuals incarcerated in Maryland carceral facilities during the height of the U.S. COVID-19 pandemic and were subsequently released from prison or jail. We transcribed the interviews, coded them, and engaged in content analysis, an inductive analytical approach to developing themes and meaning from qualitative data.
Four themes emerged from participants' descriptions of their experiences: (1) distress from fear, vulnerability, and lack of knowledge about COVID-19 and how to protect themselves, (2) shortcomings of prison and jail administrators and other personnel through lack of transparency and arbitrary and punitive enforcement of COVID-19 protocols, (3) lack of access to programming and communication with others, and (4) absence of preparation for release and access to usual re-entry services.
Participants responded that the prison and jails' response during the COVID-19 pandemic was ill-prepared, inconsistent, and without appropriate measures to mitigate restrictions on liberty and prepare them for release. The lack of information sharing amplified their sense of fear and vulnerability unique to their incarceration status. Study findings have several institutional implications, such as requiring carceral facilities to establish public health preparedness procedures and making plans publicly available.
在新冠疫情期间被监禁的人由于监禁环境中的结构性和社会性因素,面临更高的感染脆弱性。此外,由于被监禁人群中慢性健康状况更为普遍,他们也面临着更严重的新冠疾病风险。本研究旨在探索新冠疫情高峰期在马里兰州监狱和看守所被监禁的人的经历。
我们于 2021 年 1 月至 2022 年 4 月期间,对在新冠疫情高峰期期间被监禁于马里兰州惩教设施、随后被释放出狱或看守所的 10 名个人进行了半结构式电话访谈。我们对访谈进行了转录、编码,并进行了内容分析,这是一种从定性数据中发展主题和意义的归纳分析方法。
参与者描述了他们的经历,从中得出了四个主题:(1)对新冠病毒及其自身保护措施的恐惧、脆弱性和缺乏了解而感到痛苦;(2)监狱和看守所管理者以及其他人员缺乏透明度,对新冠协议任意和惩罚性执行;(3)缺乏参与项目和与他人交流的机会;(4)对释放准备不足和无法获得通常的重新融入社会服务。
参与者表示,监狱和看守所对新冠疫情的反应准备不足、不一致,且没有采取适当措施减轻对自由的限制,并为他们的释放做准备。缺乏信息共享加剧了他们因被监禁而感到的恐惧和脆弱感。研究结果对机构有几个启示,例如要求惩教设施建立公共卫生准备程序,并公开制定计划。