Prognosis

As Covid Roars Through U.S. Jails, Korea May Provide a Template

  • U.S. prisons have seen more than 200,000 cases of Covid-19
  • Depopulating prisons and screening tests can curb cases: study
An emergency care facility at San Quentin State Prison on July 8.Photographer: Justin Sullivan/Getty Images
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When three prison inmates were infected with the coronavirus in South Korea early last spring, corrections officers responded swiftly.

“Walk-thru” testing booths were installed in each of the country’s 54 prison compounds, masks were universally distributed, and prisoners had visitations curtailed. Use of common areas was also restricted. Nine months later, the Asian nation -- which has won plaudits globally for its effective and focused virus approach -- has reported only one other Covid-19 cluster in a jail system that’s home to some 55,000 detainees: an outbreak of 11 cases.