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Tennessee Lawmaker Fears Hepatitis C Outbreak Could Jump Prison Walls

Michael Coghlan
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Flickr

Hear the radio version of this story.

A hepatitis C outbreak in the state's prisons poses a danger to guards and the general public.

That's what one state lawmaker is saying.

State Rep. John Mark Windle, D-Livingston, is urging prison officials to figure out exactly which inmates have the virus and keep it from spreading.

Windle's district includes one of the state's biggest prisons, the Morgan County Correctional Complex, which employs more than 700 people.

But it's not just prison guards' safety he's worried about. It's also that of relatives and people who will come in contact with inmates after their release.

"Ninety percent of all inmates are released back into the general population," he says. "And if you've got 10,000 people that have got hepatitis C that are going to re-enter the population, the chance for the spread of that disease is phenomenal. And we need to take steps to try to address that immediately."

But Windle says that 10,000 figure is conjecture, because prison officials don't know for sure exactly how many inmates are carrying hepatitis C. It's based on a screening of 900 inmates, roughly half of whom came up positive for hepatitis C.

Prison officials do know that more than 3,000 have the disease, which is spread through dirty needles, tattoos and bodily fluids.

Windle would like the state to give every inmate blood tests for hepatitis C — or at least develop a protocol for figuring out those most at risk for the disease. For the good of the public as much as the good of prisoners.

"If the correctional officers and the counselors are subject to being in the same personal space as those inmates ... it's not uncommon to be subjected to bodily fluids, urine, feces tossed on them," he says. "At the very minimum, we should provide a safe workplace."

Wider testing would be expensive, Windle admits. And treatment for hepatitis C could cost more than $80,000 per patient. Prison officials have cited that price — as well as the high likelihood that inmates will contract the disease again after they're cured — as major barriers to eradicating the disease.

But, says Windle, the cost to the state if the disease spreads beyond the prison walls would be far greater.

"I just think it's time to address (what) may be an epidemic," he says.

A spokeswoman for the Department of Correction responds that Tennessee prisons already have safety protocols in place to protect employees from exposure to hepatitis C.

She adds that testing positive for hepatitis C does not necessarily mean an inmate is carrying the virus because antibodies remain in the bloodstream even after they've recovered. She says doctors weigh factors such as virus type, the patient's liver condition and other health conditions before determining treatment.

Copyright 2016 WPLN News

Chas joined WPLN in 2015 after eight years with The Tennessean, including more than five years as the newspaper's statehouse reporter.Chas has also covered communities, politics and business in Massachusetts and Washington, D.C. Chas grew up in South Carolina and attended Columbia University in New York, where he studied economics and journalism. Outside of work, he's a dedicated distance runner, having completed a dozen marathons