Advocates want Ottawa to release vulnerable inmates as COVID-19 hits N.S. women's prison Social Sharing
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It's the largest outbreak in a Nova Scotia prison since the pandemic began, according to Martha Paynter, the chair of Wellness Within, a non-profit organization that provides health-care advocacy for those in the correctional system.
The close living quarters make it especially easy for disease to spread once it gains a foothold, Paynter said. And those who are incarcerated are at risk of more serious outcomes with COVID-19, given research showing that inmates are more likely to suffer from chronic illness.
"In an environment like that, you don't have control over your own body," said Paynter, who is also a registered nurse and health-care researcher at Dalhousie University.
"You don't get to say who comes near you … you simply do not have control to protect yourself."
That's why Paynter and Wellness Within are calling on federal Minister of Public Safety Marco Mendicino to facilitate the early release of as many inmates as possible.
The organization has also called on the federal correctional system to reconsider the practice of incarcerating women who are pregnant or are primary caregivers of children.
"Prison is a very dangerous and scary place at the best of times, and when there is an uncontained infectious disease that's potentially lethal circulating ... it's absolutely terrifying," said Paynter.
While the prison can hold up to 90 inmates, Paynter said there are typically about 75 people incarcerated at a time.
There are three different levels of security, but most inmates live in general population in groups of eight. Paynter said there's also the possibility of interaction during the daily medication lineup.
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