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May 16, 2003
International News
Canada: Hepatitis Spreading
Quickly in Prisons
Canadian Press
05.13.03; Tom Blackwell
Despite a new report revealing that hepatitis is spreading
quickly behind bars and most inmates refuse voluntary testing,
Canadian federal prison officials say they will not impose mandatory
infectious disease tests on inmates.
The study found that hepatitis B and C rates rose sharply between
2000 and 2001, with almost one in four inmates infected. In 2001,
more than 1,500 inmates with hepatitis C were released into the
community, up from 1,156 in 2000. But because up to 70 percent of
inmates are not tested, the Correctional Service of Canada fears
that hepatitis and HIV are even more widespread in penitentiaries
than the statistics indicate.
Citing public health research, the department refuses to make the
tests mandatory, saying to do so would undermine the trust that is
crucial to getting patients on effective treatment programs.
Offenders refuse testing for a variety of reasons, including fears
that news of a positive test could leak to other prisoners, said Dr.
Francoise Bouchard, corrections health services director-general.
Correctional officers, however, complain that not enough is being
done to protect them from dangerous viruses. "As soon as they are
sentenced to a federal penitentiary, there should be mandatory tests
for HIV, hepatitis and tuberculosis," said Sylvain Martel, president
of the Union of Canadian Correctional Officers. When forcibly
removing violent offenders from their cells, guards wear gowns,
gloves and goggles - but even so, they sometimes come in contact
with prisoners' bodily fluids. At least four or five times in the
past two years, guards exposed to potentially infected fluids have
had to undergo a six-month precautionary regimen that includes
taking antiviral drugs with "severe side effects" and refraining
from unprotected sex, Martel said.
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