More than 500 women in a federal medical prison in Texas have tested positive for coronavirus, in one of the largest confirmed outbreaks in a federal prison, the Bureau of Prisons said. The number of confirmed cases at Federal-Carswell Medical Center in Fort Worth rose to 510 on Tuesday, just two days after the Bureau of Prisons reported that 200 women had tested positive for COVID-19, the disease caused by the coronavirus.
Only Seagoville Federal Prison, also located in the Dallas-Fort Worth area, had more infected inmates, with 1,156 cases as of Tuesday.
“We are like a bunch of hamsters in a cage chasing our own tails,” Carswell prey Holli Chapman said.
Three weeks ago, the prison had reported only three confirmed cases of the virus among inmates. A prisoner Andrea Circle Bear, He died in April. On July 12, Sandra Kincaid, 69, became the second woman to die from the virus. The third, Teresa Ely, 51, died Monday.
FMC-Carswell holds inmates with medical and mental health problems. It currently has 1,357 prisoners. Since April, many inmates have told the Forth Worth Star-Telegram that they were concerned that the virus could spread through the prison.
One of the inmates who has tested positive for the virus is Reality winner, a former government contractor serving a five-year prison sentence after she pleaded guilty to submitting a classified report to a news organization.
The Carswell administration directed questions to the Bureau of Prisons. The agency said in a statement that it is taking precautions to stop the spread of the virus.
“As with any type of emergency situation, we carefully evaluate the best way to ensure the safety of staff, inmates and the public,” the agency said. “All of our facilities are implementing the BOP guideline to mitigate the spread of COVID-19.”
Last week, several Carswell women told the newspaper that the facility did not have enough disinfection supplies or protective equipment. The women also noted that the cells are not cleaned immediately after someone tests positive. Inmate Sandra Shoulders said mattresses used by women who tested positive are stacked in a television room.
“We feel basically abandoned,” he said. “(The officers) say they are doing all of this for us, that they are here with us. But they are not the ones who are quarantined 24 hours, they stay in a 6 by 6 cell with three other people with 10-minute showers. 10 minutes to talk on the phone or email to communicate with their families. “
A study published earlier this month found that the U.S. inmates are 3 times more likely to die and 5.5 times more likely to become infected with the coronavirus.
The virus has killed more than 141,000 Americans. Texas recorded 1,000 deaths in just 10 days. Those are as many deaths as in the past three months.
In Rio Grande Valley hospitals, state health authorities say 37 beds are available in the ICU. Hidalgo County is the epicenter.
“Unfortunately, our hospital rooms look like war zones because there are so many sick people there,” Hidalgo County Judge Richard Cortez told CBS News.
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