在 COVID-19 国家灾难措施期间,对马拉维监狱系统中的人权、健康权和医疗保健标准进行法律现实主义评估。

IF 1.1 Q4 PUBLIC, ENVIRONMENTAL & OCCUPATIONAL HEALTH International Journal of Prisoner Health Pub Date : 2023-09-05 Epub Date: 2022-03-18 DOI:10.1108/IJPH-10-2021-0108
Marie Claire Van Hout, Victor Mhango, Ruth Kaima, Charlotte Bigland, Triestino Mariniello
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引用次数: 0

摘要

目的:2020 年 7 月,马拉维监狱系统报告了首例 COVID-19 病例。由于基础设施薄弱、缺乏医疗保健和适当的 COVID-19 缓解措施、现有的并发症(肺结核、艾滋病毒和丙型肝炎)、营养不良以及许多囚犯健康状况不佳,人权组织对监狱系统可能爆发大量 COVID-19 并造成死亡表示担忧:作者对马拉维监狱系统在国家灾难措施期间应对 COVID-19 的情况进行了法律现实主义评估,重点关注国际、非洲和国内法律规定的健康权和医疗保健标准:尽管马拉维监狱系统缺乏资源,并采取了临时应对措施,但在防止监狱中爆发严重的 COVID-19 方面还是比较成功的。虽然马拉维的国家 COVID 计划与国际和地区协议保持一致,但基础设施不足(医务人员和医疗设备)和恶劣的拘留条件(拥挤、缺乏通风、个人卫生和环境卫生)共同导致了健康状况不佳和传染病的传播。马拉维政府宣布的灾难状态和对监狱的探视限制使在监狱工作和生活的人的条件更加恶劣:在撒哈拉以南非洲地区,监狱应对 COVID-19 的能力有限。这是对马拉维监狱系统应对 COVID-19 的方法进行的首次法律现实主义评估,它为越来越多的对非洲监狱(埃塞俄比亚、南非和津巴布韦)的 COVID-19 应对措施进行的基于人权的调查证据做出了贡献。
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A legal-realist assessment of human rights, right to health and standards of healthcare in the Malawian prison system during COVID-19 state disaster measures.

Purpose: The first case of COVID-19 in the Malawi prison system was reported in July 2020. Human rights organisations raised concerns about the possibility of significant COVID-19 outbreaks and deaths in the prison system, because of the poor infrastructure, lack of healthcare and adequate COVID-19 mitigation measures, existing co-morbidities (tuberculosis, HIV and hepatitis C), malnutrition and poor health of many prisoners.

Design/methodology/approach: The authors conducted a legal-realist assessment of the Malawian prison system response to COVID-19 during state disaster measures, with a specific focus on the right to health and standards of healthcare as mandated in international, African and domestic law.

Findings: The Malawi prison system was relatively successful in preventing serious COVID-19 outbreaks in its prisons, despite the lack of resources and the ad hoc reactive approach adopted. Whilst the Malawi national COVID plan was aligned to international and regional protocols, the combination of infrastructural deficits (clinical staff and medical provisions) and poor conditions of detention (congestion, lack of ventilation, hygiene and sanitation) were conducive to poor health and the spread of communicable disease. The state of disaster declared by the Malawi Government and visitation restrictions at prisons worsened prison conditions for those working and living there.

Originality/value: In sub-Saharan Africa, there is limited capacity of prisons to adequately respond to COVID-19. This is the first legal-realist assessment of the Malawian prison system approach to tackling COVID-19, and it contributes to a growing evidence of human rights-based investigations into COVID-19 responses in African prisons (Ethiopia, South Africa and Zimbabwe).

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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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