Emerging Infectious Diseases (Apr 2024)

Lessons Learned from Public Health and State Prison Collaborations during COVID-19 Pandemic and Multifacility Tuberculosis Outbreak, Washington, USA

  • Sixtine O. Gurrey,
  • Lara B. Strick,
  • Lana K. Dov,
  • James S. Miller,
  • Monica Pecha,
  • Randy M. Stalter,
  • David L. Miller,
  • Brandon Marshall,
  • Alonso Pezo Salazar,
  • Laura P. Newman

DOI
https://doi.org/10.3201/eid3013.230777
Journal volume & issue
Vol. 30, no. 13
pp. 17 – 20

Abstract

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The large COVID-19 outbreaks in prisons in the Washington (USA) State Department of Corrections (WADOC) system during 2020 highlighted the need for a new public health approach to prevent and control COVID-19 transmission in the system’s 12 facilities. WADOC and the Washington State Department of Health (WADOH) responded by strengthening partnerships through dedicated corrections-focused public health staff, improving cross-agency outbreak response coordination, implementing and developing corrections-specific public health guidance, and establishing collaborative data systems. The preexisting partnerships and trust between WADOC and WADOH, strengthened during the COVID-19 response, laid the foundation for a collaborative response during late 2021 to the largest tuberculosis outbreak in Washington State in the past 20 years. We describe challenges of a multiagency collaboration during 2 outbreak responses, as well as approaches to address those challenges, and share lessons learned for future communicable disease outbreak responses in correctional settings.

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