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Correctional Healthcare

Correctional Healthcare is critical to prison and jail management, ensuring inmates receive necessary medical, dental, and mental health services. This section provides articles that explore the challenges, best practices, and innovations in delivering Correctional Healthcare. Topics include managing chronic illnesses, addressing mental health needs, and navigating legal and ethical considerations in inmate care. Understanding Correctional Healthcare is essential for professionals committed to providing quality care in a correctional setting. For further reading, explore related topics on COVID and its impact on rehabilitation and facility management.

Six state prisons reported issues, including malfunctioning dishwashers, cockroach infestations and outdated medical supplies
The report highlights missed evaluations, underpaid staff and unresolved inmate complaints under private contractors
The Bureau of Prisons reforms include updating suicide prevention protocols and using data-driven strategies to reduce deaths in custody
The criminal justice system has already adapted in the face of the coronavirus pandemic
The U.S. Census Bureau projects that by 2030, people over the age of 55 will account for almost one-third of all incarcerated people
Under the terms of the settlement, the county will transition its three juvenile facilities from a corrections model to a treatment model
The state is reviewing whether Cumberland County Jail COs used excessive force; it will also determine if COs provided the inmates with proper medical care
The lawsuit is one of several long-running cases by inmate advocates complaining of substandard healthcare and mistreatment of vulnerable populations
Lawyers have collected 100 declarations from inmates and hope to convince the state to make the department adopt a slew of new reforms
A doctor said the Metropolitan Correctional Center was infested with mice, rats and roaches, reflecting a “basic disregard for sanitation and infection control”
US District Judge Solomon Oliver rebutted an opinion from a doctor who said prison conditions could lead to an outbreak
COs described medical staff limitations, haphazard hygiene procedures and confusion over COVID-19 tests and temperature checks in many facilities
A union representing corrections officers has repeatedly pressed for more PPE and testing in the facilities
A total of 373 staff members and 684 inmates within the Department of Correction have tested positive for COVID-19
Miami-Dade appears to have tested far more inmates, about one-third of those incarcerated, than other penal institutions
“They felt that they had not been given their individualized COVID-19 test results from our private healthcare provider,” MDOC spokesman Chris Gautz said
Leaders in our nation’s jails and prisons should follow these six steps to address the crisis, reduce the risk and provide much-needed support
In addition to the risk of depression and suicide, transgender people experience sexual violence, harassment and other adverse conditions at higher rates than the general population
The number of inmates with COVID-19 at Federal Correctional Institution Lompoc shot up to 792, making it the largest federal penitentiary outbreak in the nation
Many arrestees think that if they say they have COVID-19, they will not go to jail, but that’s not how the system works
Decon7 Systems provides a disinfectant that effectively neutralizes the novel coronavirus and a variety of other biological threats
Medical staff can provide an inmate’s protected healthcare information to custody when requested and still maintain compliance with HIPAA regulations
Correctional institutions are uniquely susceptible to the rapid spread of disease
At least 81 inmates and 29 corrections officers have tested positive at the California Institution for Men
FDNY chief medical director Dr. David Prezant clarifies the difference between the two test types and what results mean for immunity
Correctional experts discuss the steps agencies must take to protect correctional staff from COVID-19
The department has also begun point prevalence testing, which involves testing asymptomatic individuals
“Once the virus enters a detention center, the regular movement of staff in and out of the facility means that the virus will spread back to the community,” a doctor said
When asked about a lack of testing, the head of New Jersey’s prison system denied a widespread problem
The 500-mile journey an inmate made after early release illustrates the dangers the coronavirus presents to communities
Officials claim the ousted medical provider was responsible for a one-week doubling of the number of infected employees and inmates at Lansing Correctional Facility
Advocates say there’s not enough protective gear, cleaning supplies or space in immigration detention centers to allow for social distancing
There are currently 254 Cook County Jail inmates with mild-to-moderate COVID-19 symptoms