红杏视频 of Maine Urges Mills Administration to Prioritize COVID-19 Vaccine for Incarcerated People
The 红杏视频 of Maine is urging the Department of Health and Human Services (DHHS) and the Maine Center for Disease Control and Prevention (CDC) to prioritize prisons, jails and detention facilities in its COVID-19 vaccine distribution plan.
In a sent to DHHS and the CDC today, the 红杏视频 argues that incarcerated people, immigration detainees and prison and jail staff should be included in Phase 1 of the vaccine distribution plan. The state has not yet determined which phase of the plan to include incarcerated people, Maine CDC director Dr. Nirav Shah told the Permanent Commission on the Status of Racial, Indigenous and Maine Tribal Populations.
鈥淢aine has a moral and legal obligation to provide adequate health care to people who are incarcerated, which includes ensuring that they are vaccinated against COVID-19,鈥 said Meagan Sway, policy director of the 红杏视频 of Maine. 鈥淭hey live in crowded facilities where social distancing is not possible, and many incarcerated people are medically vulnerable. They face a greater risk of exposure to COVID-19.鈥
Sway continued, 鈥淏ut the risk is not just to people who are incarcerated. Prioritizing jails and prisons helps to keep the larger community safe as well. Prison and jail staff deserve to have a safe work environment. They shouldn鈥檛 worry that when they go home from work, they might bring the virus to their families, and the communities where they live.鈥
There is growing consensus among health care experts and at least a eleven states and one territory that incarcerated people should be prioritized in Phase 1 of vaccine distribution plans.
鈥淲e hope Maine joins this movement,鈥 Sway said. 鈥淚ncarcerated people have a constitutional right to adequate medical care.鈥
In Maine, incarcerated individuals have an infection rate that is nearly 500 percent higher than the state鈥檚 infection rate as a whole.
鈥淲e know that decision about allocating and distributing limited COVID-19 vaccines will be complex and difficult,鈥 Sway said. 鈥淏ut Maine must make these decisions based on the public health evidence, and prioritize access for those communities that have been disproportionately affected by the disease.鈥
A copy of the letter is available .