Abstract

Background: The recent COVID-19 pandemic has highlighted the deficiencies that characterize the functioning of the Italian national health system. Prisons have always mirrored the most radical expressions of these weaknesses. During the early stages of the pandemic, prison facilities across Italy underwent a series of changes dictated by the need to ensure the safety of the prisoners and staff. The adoption of these rules contributed to a total or partial redefinition of many central facets of life in prison, such as intake procedures for new arrivals and the ways prisoners were allowed to communicate with their families.Objectives: The aim of this qualitative study was to analyze the testimony of penitentiary healthcare workers in prisons throughout Italy to determine the impact of COVID-19 on their professional and personal lives.Participants: Thirty-eight participants were contacted and 20 decided to participate in the interview. The sample was made up of 10 women and 10 men. All the participants were members of the healthcare staff of a penitentiary facility (psychologists, psychiatrists, physicians, and nurses). All were recruited through an Italian association whose mission is the development, promotion, and implementation of social solidarity projects including prisoners' social and health care. This study was facilitated through representatives serving in nine different regions of Italy. The participants were divided according to their professional roles in prisons.Method: In-depth interviews were conducted by telephone or online using telecommunication platforms (e.g., Zoom, WhatsApp, and Skype). The transcribed texts underwent thematic analysis using the Atlas.ti software to identify patterns of meaning across the dataset.Results: Four main themes emerged from the analysis: Interpersonal difficulties, management and operational difficulties, the personal distress and bereavement of healthcare workers, and the distress of inmates. The importance of relationship management skills when interacting with prisoners emerged as a key topic in many interviews, and the participants highlighted the need for adequate training. The increase in prisoners' anxiety made communication more difficult.Conclusions: The findings suggest that healthcare workers in jails need emergency-oriented training. Participants described their feeling of loneliness and quasi-abandonment when carrying out their duties during the pandemic. In particular, they underscored the need for psychological guidance to better manage altered reactions with prisoners and colleagues as a result of heightened death anxiety and isolation.

Highlights

  • During the first months of 2020, the Italian health system was forced to grapple with the recent pandemic caused by the spread of COVID-19, which further undermined its endemic problems

  • These dire events can be attributed to the abysmal conditions of Italian prisoners that stem from overcrowding, which makes for high constant stress levels of inmates and custodial workers

  • Regarding the studies on the psychological effects of epidemics, a research by Salazar de Pablo et al (2020) reports the most frequent symptoms in healthcare professionals, leaving, the prison context unexplored in this area. To respond to this need, the present study investigated the experiences and possible critical events in Italian prisons and their impact on healthcare personnel working in penitentiaries across Italy during the COVD-19 lockdown and emergency period

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Summary

Introduction

During the first months of 2020, the Italian health system was forced to grapple with the recent pandemic caused by the spread of COVID-19, which further undermined its endemic problems. According to ANSA it (2020; an Italian news agency), in a single weekend, out of a total of 189 prisons, serious structural damage resulting from vandalism and arson affected over 70 prisons; in addition, 30 prisons held peaceful demonstrations (ANSA it, 2020) These riots in many cases enabled the inmates to gain access to restricted areas where drugs including certain lethal medications are stored. During the early stages of the pandemic, prison facilities across Italy underwent a series of changes dictated by the need to ensure the safety of the prisoners and staff The adoption of these rules contributed to a total or partial redefinition of many central facets of life in prison, such as intake procedures for new arrivals and the ways prisoners were allowed to communicate with their families

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