Widespread coronavirus testing in Ohio prisons fueled a weekend surge in cases, which researchers say could represent the peak of the pandemic in Ohio. There were 11,292 cases of COVID-19 as of Sunday, and nearly a quarter of those are either inmates or staff at Ohio prisons.
So far, 2,400 inmates and 244 prison workers have tested positive for coronavirus, as the state has instituted mass testing at three facilities. That's 23% of all COVID-19 cases in Ohio.
"Pickaway Correctional Institution, Marion Correctional Institution and the Franklin Medical Center are undergoing mass testing right now of their staff and their inmates," said Ohio Department of Rehabilitation and Corrections director Annette Chambers-Smith.
She said the goal is to find out who’s carrying the disease into those prisons – since many are not showing symptoms.
“What we hope to be able to determine is here’s the percentage of people that are, they are positive for COVID but they don't have any symptoms. And then we'd be able to separate them from the people who don't have COVID at all," Chambers-Smith said. "And we're the only state in the union doing that.”
Marion County now leads the state in COVID-19 cases, and 73% of the Marion Correctional Institution has tested positive. Around a fifth of the inmates at Pickaway have tested positive.
As many as five inmates at Pickaway and a corrections worker at Marion have died.
The mass testing is also potentially driving up the gap between cases involving males and females on the state's coronavirus website.
The number of cases in males and females was almost evenly split between the genders, but now 57% of the cases are males. The three prisons where testing is being done are all-male facilities.
The Marion Correctional Institution will also be getting some help from about 50 personnel from the Ohio National Guard, who have been deployed for "mission-critical functions." About 30 National Guard personnel are performing similar duties at the Pickaway Correctional Institution.
The head of the Ohio Civil Service Employees Association Chris Mabe has called for the National Guard to help with security at all Ohio prisons. Chris Mabe is now in quarantine, after his wife, who works at the Lorain Correctional Institution, tested positive for COVID-19.
What do you want to know about coronavirus in Ohio? Ask your questions below.
_