Citation
LeMasters, Katherine; Brinkley-Rubinstein, Lauren; Maner, Morgan; Peterson, Meghan; Nowotny, Kathryn; & Bailey, Zinzi D. (2022). Carceral Epidemiology: Mass Incarceration and Structural Racism during the COVID-19 Pandemic. Lancet Public Health, 7(3), e287-90. PMCID: PMC8890762Abstract
The COVID-19 pandemic and the ongoing epidemic of mass incarceration are closely intertwined, as COVID-19 entered US prisons and jails at astounding rates. Although observers warned of the swiftness with which COVID-19 could devastate people who are held and work in prisons and jails, their warnings were not heeded quickly enough. Incarcerated populations were deprioritised, and COVID-19 infected and killed those in jails and prisons at rates that outpaced the rates among the general population. The COVID-19 pandemic highlighted what has been long-known: mass incarceration is a key component of structural racism that creates and exacerbates health inequities. It is imperative that the public health, particularly epidemiology, public policy, advocacy, and medical communities, are catalysed by the COVID-19 pandemic to drastically rethink the USA's criminal legal system and the public health emergency that it has created and to push for progressive reform.URL
http://dx.doi.org/10.1016/S2468-2667(22)00005-6Reference Type
Journal ArticleYear Published
2022Journal Title
Lancet Public HealthAuthor(s)
LeMasters, KatherineBrinkley-Rubinstein, Lauren
Maner, Morgan
Peterson, Meghan
Nowotny, Kathryn
Bailey, Zinzi D.