| Literature DB >> 32632787 |
David H Cloud1, Cyrus Ahalt2, Dallas Augustine2, David Sears3, Brie Williams2.
Abstract
In the face of the continually worsening COVID-19 pandemic, jails and prisons have become the greatest vectors of community transmission and are a point of heightened crisis and fear within the global crisis. Critical public health tools to mitigate the spread of COVID-19 are medical isolation and quarantine, but use of these tools is complicated in prisons and jails where decades of overuse of punitive solitary confinement is the norm. This has resulted in advocates denouncing the use of any form of isolation and attorneys litigating to end its use. It is essential to clarify the critical differences between punitive solitary confinement and the ethical use of medical isolation and quarantine during a pandemic. By doing so, then all those invested in stopping the spread of COVID-19 in prisons can work together to integrate medically sound, humane forms of medical isolation and quarantine that follow community standards of care rather than punitive forms of solitary confinement to manage COVID-19.Entities:
Mesh:
Year: 2020 PMID: 32632787 PMCID: PMC7338113 DOI: 10.1007/s11606-020-05968-y
Source DB: PubMed Journal: J Gen Intern Med ISSN: 0884-8734 Impact factor: 5.128
Comparing Solitary Confinement, Medical Isolation, and Quarantine
| Solitary confinement | Quarantine | Medical isolation | |
|---|---|---|---|
| Mechanism | Separation of people from population as a means of punishment | Separation of people exposed to contagious disease from population | Separation of people with a contagious disease from population |
| Purpose | Punitive | Reduce spread of disease | Reduce spread of disease |
| Duration | Determined by custody | Determined by medical staff, until incubation period passes or status is changed to medical isolation if patient develops disease | Determined by medical staff, until person is deemed no longer contagious |
Characteristics of Solitary Confinement and Medical Isolation