Mass COVID infections thanks to mass incarceration ... but hoping it might lead to mass increase in understanding this virus

The Marshall Project is continuing to provide great COVID coverage, and its has two new pieces that spotlight the massive spread of the coronavirus among incarcerated individuals.  Here are the headlines and highlights:

From California to North Carolina, prisons that do aggressive testing are finding that infection is spreading quickly.  Take Ohio’s state prison system, which has two of the most serious outbreaks in the country. It has started mass testing of all staff and inmates at its most afflicted facilities.  Marion Correctional Institution, an hour north of Columbus, has reported four deaths, but has more than 2,000 prisoners and at least 160 staffers who tested positive for the virus.  At Pickaway Correctional Institution an hour away, at least nine prisoners have died, while more than 1,500 prisoners and 79 staffers have tested positive.

We now can see, through data collected by The Marshall Project, that thousands of prisoners have caught the illness, and the number of cases has grown more than threefold in the last week alone.  Thousands more workers, correctional officers and medical staff have been sickened.  And more than 140 people — most of them incarcerated — have died thus far.

It is hardly surprising that COVID spreads wildly in a prison setting where social distancing is impossible and effective hygiene is always challenging.  But I so badly want to hope that the fact that such large populations are now testing positive might enable us to gain a greater understanding of this devilish virus.  Encouragingly, this new USA Today article, headlined "Mass virus testing in state prisons reveals hidden asymptomatic infections; feds join effort," suggests it might:

But 39 inmates testing positive for the coronavirus at the Neuse state prison in Goldsboro, North Carolina, was still cause for alarm.  Of the more than 50 detention centers across the state, none had more infections at the time than Neuse, prompting officials to take the extraordinary step of testing all 700 prisoners at the medium security facility near Raleigh.

Within a week, infections had surged to 444.  Perhaps even more revealing: More than 90% of the newly diagnosed inmates displayed no symptoms, meaning that the deadly virus could have remained hidden had the state followed federal guidelines that largely reserve testing for people displaying common symptoms, such as fever and respiratory distress.  “We would never have known,” North Carolina Department of Public Safety spokesman John Bull said.

Even as vulnerable prison systems have ramped up scrutiny of inmates and staffers with broad quarantines and elaborate contact tracing investigations, increased testing is proving just as crucial in assessing the virus’ spread within detention systems as it is in the free world.  Mass testing at three state prisons in Ohio has yielded results similar to North Carolina's, with officials suggesting that the strategy and findings could have broad implications, not just for containing outbreaks in detention centers but in making larger decisions about when states should re-open for business and loosen social distancing restrictions.

I am so saddened that COVID has turned our prisons and jails into human petri dishes, and I am so troubled even thinking about incarcerated populations serving as some kind of experimental "control" group in continuing research.  Nevertheless, at a time where it seems we still know so little about COVID, I hope our public health experts and researchers can, in an ethically appropriate way, effectively use the new infection data coming out of our nation's many prisons to help increase our understanding of this virus in order to better prevent its spread and better treat those who contract it.

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