The prevalence of HIV, hepatitis B virus, hepatitis C virus, and
tuberculosis are higher in prisons than in the general population in
most countries worldwide. Prisons have emerged as a risk environment for
these infections to be further concentrated, amplified, and then
transmitted to the community after prisoners are released. In the
absence of alternatives to incarceration, prisons and detention
facilities could be leveraged to promote primary and secondary
prevention strategies for these infections to improve prisoners health
and reduce risk throughout incarceration and on release. Effective
treatment of opioid use disorders with opioid agonist therapies (eg,
methadone and buprenorphine) prevents blood-borne infections via
reductions in injection in prison and after release. However, large gaps
exist in the implementation of these strategies across all regions.
Collaboration between the criminal justice and public health systems
will be required for successful implementation of these strategies.
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