COVID-19 and incarcerated older adults: a commentary on risk, care and early release in Australia.

IF 1.1 Q4 PUBLIC, ENVIRONMENTAL & OCCUPATIONAL HEALTH International Journal of Prisoner Health Pub Date : 2021-10-18 Epub Date: 2021-05-17 DOI:10.1108/IJPH-10-2020-0078
Ye In Jane Hwang, Natasha Ann Ginnivan, Paul Leslie Simpson, Susan Baidawi, Adrienne Withall, Brie Williams, Tony Butler
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Abstract

Purpose: The purpose of this commentary is to draw upon available literature and practices related to COVID-19 and management of older incarcerated adults in Australia to highlight key matters for better risk management and care of this population during this and future infectious disease pan/epidemics.

Design/methodology/approach: The present commentary draws on current policies, practices and literature regarding the health, needs and management of older incarcerated adults in Australia to discuss risk, care and early release for this population during the COVID-19 pandemic.

Findings: Incarcerated persons experience poorer health and accelerated age-related decline compared to those in the general community. The present situation offers the opportunity to fill knowledge and practice gaps, including policies for staff training, identification of dementia and cognitive decline, assessment of mobility issues, addressing barriers to health-seeking, possibilities of medical or compassionate release, risk assessment and release protocols and post-release needs.

Practical implications: While Australian prisons have acknowledged the vulnerability of older persons, more focused adaptation of COVID-19-related policies to consider adults as young as 45 years are needed. Appropriate ethical identification and management of cases in this population is needed, as is discussion on issues of decarceration and medical release. Re-conceptualisation of incarcerated adults as "citizens in need of care", rather than as "offenders to be secured", will be beneficial. Robust, local evidence is needed to assist decision-making.

Originality/value: This is a comprehensive, focused review of relevant evidence, policies and practices for a growing subpopulation of prisoners worldwide with complex needs and particular vulnerability to the COVID-19.

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COVID-19 和被监禁的老年人:关于澳大利亚风险、护理和提前释放的评论。
目的:本评论旨在借鉴与 COVID-19 和澳大利亚老年在押成年人管理相关的现有文献和实践,强调在这次和未来的传染病泛滥/流行期间更好地管理和护理这一人群的关键事项:本评论借鉴了有关澳大利亚老年被监禁成年人的健康、需求和管理的现行政策、实践和文献,讨论了在 COVID-19 大流行期间该人群的风险、护理和提前释放问题:研究结果:与普通社区的人相比,被监禁者的健康状况较差,与年龄相关的衰退速度加快。目前的情况为填补知识和实践方面的空白提供了机会,包括员工培训政策、痴呆症和认知能力衰退的识别、行动问题评估、解决寻求健康方面的障碍、医疗或恩恤释放的可能性、风险评估和释放协议以及释放后的需求:虽然澳大利亚监狱已经认识到老年人的脆弱性,但仍需要对 COVID-19 相关政策进行更有针对性的调整,以考虑到 45 岁以下的成年人。需要对这一人群中的病例进行适当的伦理识别和管理,同时也需要讨论非监禁和医疗释放的问题。将被监禁的成年人重新视为 "需要照顾的公民",而不是 "需要保护的罪犯",这将是有益的。需要强有力的本地证据来协助决策:这是对相关证据、政策和实践进行的一次全面、集中的审查,这些证据、政策和实践针对的是全球范围内日益增长的、具有复杂需求且特别容易感染 COVID-19 的囚犯群体。
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来源期刊
International Journal of Prisoner Health
International Journal of Prisoner Health PUBLIC, ENVIRONMENTAL & OCCUPATIONAL HEALTH-
CiteScore
2.80
自引率
21.40%
发文量
56
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