NASHVILLE (AP) — Tennessee corrections officials are looking into whether to test all state inmates for the new coronavirus after positive tests have come back for staffers and inmates, a Department of Correction spokeswoman said Tuesday.
On Friday, the department mass tested 1,145 workers at Northwest Correctional Complex and Bledsoe County Correctional Complex, finding that 13 department staff and six contract workers tested positive, all of them asymptomatic at the time of testing. The widespread testing came in reaction to six workers previously testing positive at the facilities.
The department's website says four inmates have tested positive, including confirmed cases at Trousdale Turner Correctional Center and Turney Center Industrial Complex.
There were more than 21,700 state inmates in adult facilities as of February. Tennessee has 14 state prisons, including four run by the private prison company CoreCivic.
"In conjunction with the Department of Health, we are evaluating the process of testing all inmates," Department of Correction spokeswoman Dorinda Carter said in an email Tuesday.
Carter said the department already has protocols in place to address illnesses in prisons, including isolation or treatment at facility infirmaries or outside hospitals.
Workers who tested positive were told to self-isolate for 14 days. The department says it is tracing who came in contact with those who tested positive, and staff and inmates have received cloth masks.
An inmate at the Turney Center Industrial Complex-Annex, for one, had a low-grade fever last week and was placed in quarantine, taken to the hospital and then tested positive. Three inmates who may have been exposed are in quarantine for 14 days and did not have symptoms as of a Friday update.
Inmates have been quarantined on other occasions when may have been exposed to someone who tested positive.
Last month, a group led by former Davidson County public defender Dawn Deaner asked the state Supreme Court to order the release of a number of prisoners to help prevent the spread of the new coronavirus.
The department's website says there are "no plans for early release from TDOC prisons at this time because of the coronavirus."
The American Civil Liberties Union of Tennessee and the Tennessee Association of Criminal Defense Lawyers, meanwhile, wrote to Gov. Bill Lee early this month requesting regular updates on rates of infection and testing in state prisons and juvenile detention facilities.
Meanwhile, the Veterans Administration's Tennessee Valley Healthcare System is hiring health care workers to staff its hospitals and clinics during the COVID-19 pandemic.
The system is offering both temporary and permanent assignments, according to a news release. It is also recruiting recent retirees with experience in high-need areas, with the possibility of dual compensation waivers that allow retirees to receive annuities while receiving full compensation.
In addition, Tennessee Valley Healthcare System is seeking nurse practitioners and registered nurses for 120-day appointments with the Travel Nurse Corps, a VA-operated internal pool of nurses available for temporary short-term assignments throughout the country.
The Tennessee Valley Healthcare system includes hospitals in Nashville and Murfressboro as well as more than a dozen community-based outpatient clinics in Tennessee and Kentucky.
As of Monday, state officials said Tennessee had more than 5,600 confirmed cases of COVID-19 and at least 109 deaths.
For most people, the coronavirus causes mild or moderate symptoms, such as fever and cough that clear up in two to three weeks. For some, especially older adults and people with existing health problems, it can cause more severe illness, including life-threatening pneumonia.
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