From Peter Wagner <[email protected]>
Subject NEW 50-STATE REPORT: Mass incarceration led to huge increase in national COVID-19 caseloads
Date December 15, 2020 2:00 PM
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Over half a million cases this summer linked to mass incarceration

Prison Policy Initiative updates for December 15, 2020 Showing how mass incarceration harms communities and our national welfare

New report shows that mass incarceration led to huge increase in national COVID-19 caseloads [[link removed]] The study provides the first estimates of how prisons and jails led to more coronavirus infections, both inside and outside prisons. [[link removed]]

Over half a million COVID-19 cases this summer were directly linked to mass incarceration, we find in a new report [[link removed]] released at 12:00 a.m. this morning, produced in partnership with Professor Gregory Hooks. Our study provides the first estimates of how prisons and jails — which are "super spreaders" of the virus — added to COVID-19 caseloads on the county, state, and national levels, including infections of people both inside and outside prisons.

"Our findings leave no doubt that locking up millions of people in this country in close quarters has led to mass sickness and death in 2020, both in and outside of prisons," said Hooks. "This huge growth in COVID-19 cases isn't the fault of incarcerated people; it's the fault of tough-on-crime politicians who insist that mass incarceration is necessary to keep us safe."

In the study, titled Mass Incarceration, COVID-19, and Community Spread, [[link removed]] Hooks compared the population density of incarcerated people in U.S. counties to the growth in COVID-19 cases in those counties over the summer of 2020. To get a more direct measure of community spread across county lines, he also measured the impact on county caseloads from prison and jail populations held in nearby counties located within the same multi-county economic areas. The findings include:

At the county level: Over the summer of 2020, large prisons and jail populations within nonmetro counties (i.e. rural areas or those with small cities) directly contributed to higher COVID-19 caseloads in those counties. At the regional level: COVID-19 caseloads grew much more quickly over the summer among counties in greater economic areas containing large prisons and jails. At the national level: Mass incarceration led to more than half a million additional COVID-19 cases nationwide - or about 1 in 8 of all new cases - over the summer.

The report, written to be accessible to a general audience, includes graphics illustrating the major findings, as well as several tables listing the number of COVID-19 cases attributable to mass incarceration in the most heavily impacted states and economic areas. Additional appendix tables provide estimates of additional cases linked to incarceration for every county, economic area, and state in the U.S.

As the report explains, prisons and jails offer ideal conditions for the transmission of the coronavirus and have had the largest COVID-19 outbreaks in the U.S. on most days in 2020. A team of epidemiologists predicted [[link removed]] in April that mass incarceration would lead to hundreds of thousands of additional cases in the U.S. In June, we released a report with the ACLU [[link removed]] showing that states were failing at the one effort likely to prevent such a tragedy: the safe reduction of prison and jail populations. As of mid-November, we have shown, [[link removed]] prison and jail populations are still dangerously high.

"Now that we have the first national numbers showing how prisons and jails sped up the spread of COVID-19, lawmakers need to take action to depopulate these facilities, or we will see even more preventable cases and deaths linked to the conditions in prisons and jails," said Prison Policy Initiative Research Director Wendy Sawyer, co-author of Mass Incarceration, COVID-19, and Community Spread. [[link removed]] "Even though the COVID-19 vaccine is rolling out, it will be months before the virus stops cycling through correctional facilities, and the action states have taken so far has not been enough to slow it down. So far, we've seen that too many lawmakers don't care enough about people in prison to take action on their behalf, but our findings show that failing to reduce prison populations during the pandemic has led to more people outside prison getting sick as well."

The full report is available at [link removed]. [[link removed]]

Please support our work [[link removed]]

Our work is made possible by private donations. Can you help us keep going? We can accept tax-deductible gifts online [[link removed]] or via paper checks sent to PO Box 127 Northampton MA 01061. Thank you!

Other news: Is your state prioritizing people in prison to receive the COVID-19 vaccine? [[link removed]]

We released 48-state research last week showing how states are addressing incarcerated people and corrections staff in their publicly-available vaccination plans. We found that most states put incarcerated people — even those who are old and vulnerable — in phase 2, and 10 states have no clear plans for people in prison at all.

See what your state is doing. [[link removed]]

Please support our work [[link removed]]

Our work is made possible by private donations. Can you help us keep going? We can accept tax-deductible gifts online [[link removed]] or via paper checks sent to PO Box 127 Northampton MA 01061. Thank you!

Our other newsletters Ending prison gerrymandering ( archives [[link removed]]) Criminal justice research library ( archives) [[link removed]]

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