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Implementation of COVID-19 vaccination services in prison in six European countries: translating emergency intervention into routine life-course vaccination

Implementation of COVID-19 vaccination services in prison in six European countries: translating emergency intervention into routine life-course vaccination
Implementation of COVID-19 vaccination services in prison in six European countries: translating emergency intervention into routine life-course vaccination
Background: evidence has shown that the risk of transmission of SARS-CoV-2 is much higher in prisons than in the community. The release of the COVID-19 vaccine and the recommendation by WHO to include prisons among priority settings have led to the inclusion of prisons in national COVID-19 vaccination strategies. Evidence on prison health and healthcare services provision is limited and often focuses on a single country or institution due to the multiple challenges of conducting research in prison settings. The present study was done in the framework of the EU-founded project RISE-Vac. It aimed to analyse the best practices and challenges applied in implementing COVID-19 universal vaccination services during the pandemic to support future expansion of routine life course vaccination services for people living in prison (PLP).

Methods: two online cross-sectional surveys were designed and piloted: survey1 on prison characteristics and (non-COVID-19) immunisation practices; survey2 on the implementation and coverage of COVID-19 vaccination with open-ended questions for thematic analysis. Each RISE-Vac project partner distributed the questionnaire to one or two prisons in their country. Answers were collected from eight European prisons’ directors or medical directors between November 2021-May 2022.

Results: according to our findings, the implementation modalities of COVID-19 vaccination services in the surveyed prisons were effective in improving PLP vaccination coverage. Strategies for optimal management of the vaccination campaign included: periodic time slot for PLP vaccination; new staff recruitment and task shifting; distribution of informational material both to PLP and prison staff. Key challenges included continuity of care after release, immunisation information system, and vaccine hesitancy.

Conclusions: to the best of our knowledge, this is the first study describing the implementation of COVID-19 vaccination services in European prisons, suggesting that the expansion of vaccination provision in prison is possible. There is no unique solution that will fit every country but commonalities likely to be important in the design and implementation of future vaccination campaigns targeting PLP emerged. Increased availability of vaccination services in prison is not only possible, but feasible and highly desirable, and can contribute to the reduction of health inequalities.
COVID-19, Europe, Health inequities, Prison, Vaccination
1471-2458
Mazzilli, Sara
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Cocco, Nicola
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Petri, Davide
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Moazen, Babak
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Rosello, Alicia
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D'Arcy, Jemima
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Plugge, Emma
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Baglietto, Laura
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Murauer, Eva
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Stover, Heino
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Trattonikolas, Tassos
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Stylianou, Iakovos
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Doltu, Svetlana
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Busmachiu, Vlad
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Mavrou, Josefina
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Yiasemi, Ionna
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Barbiros, Irina
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da Costa, FA
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Meroueh, Fadi
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Ranieri, Roberto
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Tavoschi, Lara
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Mazzilli, Sara
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Cocco, Nicola
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Petri, Davide
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Moazen, Babak
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Rosello, Alicia
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D'Arcy, Jemima
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Plugge, Emma
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Baglietto, Laura
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Murauer, Eva
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Stover, Heino
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Trattonikolas, Tassos
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Stylianou, Iakovos
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Doltu, Svetlana
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Busmachiu, Vlad
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Mavrou, Josefina
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Yiasemi, Ionna
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Barbiros, Irina
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da Costa, FA
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Meroueh, Fadi
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Ranieri, Roberto
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Tavoschi, Lara
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Mazzilli, Sara, Cocco, Nicola, Petri, Davide, Moazen, Babak, Rosello, Alicia, D'Arcy, Jemima, Plugge, Emma, Baglietto, Laura, Murauer, Eva, Stover, Heino, Trattonikolas, Tassos, Stylianou, Iakovos, Doltu, Svetlana, Busmachiu, Vlad, Mavrou, Josefina, Yiasemi, Ionna, Barbiros, Irina, da Costa, FA, Meroueh, Fadi, Ranieri, Roberto and Tavoschi, Lara (2024) Implementation of COVID-19 vaccination services in prison in six European countries: translating emergency intervention into routine life-course vaccination. BMC Public Health, 24 (1), [1001]. (doi:10.1186/s12889-024-18063-2).

Record type: Article

Abstract

Background: evidence has shown that the risk of transmission of SARS-CoV-2 is much higher in prisons than in the community. The release of the COVID-19 vaccine and the recommendation by WHO to include prisons among priority settings have led to the inclusion of prisons in national COVID-19 vaccination strategies. Evidence on prison health and healthcare services provision is limited and often focuses on a single country or institution due to the multiple challenges of conducting research in prison settings. The present study was done in the framework of the EU-founded project RISE-Vac. It aimed to analyse the best practices and challenges applied in implementing COVID-19 universal vaccination services during the pandemic to support future expansion of routine life course vaccination services for people living in prison (PLP).

Methods: two online cross-sectional surveys were designed and piloted: survey1 on prison characteristics and (non-COVID-19) immunisation practices; survey2 on the implementation and coverage of COVID-19 vaccination with open-ended questions for thematic analysis. Each RISE-Vac project partner distributed the questionnaire to one or two prisons in their country. Answers were collected from eight European prisons’ directors or medical directors between November 2021-May 2022.

Results: according to our findings, the implementation modalities of COVID-19 vaccination services in the surveyed prisons were effective in improving PLP vaccination coverage. Strategies for optimal management of the vaccination campaign included: periodic time slot for PLP vaccination; new staff recruitment and task shifting; distribution of informational material both to PLP and prison staff. Key challenges included continuity of care after release, immunisation information system, and vaccine hesitancy.

Conclusions: to the best of our knowledge, this is the first study describing the implementation of COVID-19 vaccination services in European prisons, suggesting that the expansion of vaccination provision in prison is possible. There is no unique solution that will fit every country but commonalities likely to be important in the design and implementation of future vaccination campaigns targeting PLP emerged. Increased availability of vaccination services in prison is not only possible, but feasible and highly desirable, and can contribute to the reduction of health inequalities.

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s12889-024-18063-2 - Version of Record
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e-pub ahead of print date: 10 April 2024
Keywords: COVID-19, Europe, Health inequities, Prison, Vaccination

Identifiers

Local EPrints ID: 493532
URI: http://eprints.soton.ac.uk/id/eprint/493532
ISSN: 1471-2458
PURE UUID: 8750818a-aed3-45d4-9a98-5569d46ceb4c
ORCID for Emma Plugge: ORCID iD orcid.org/0000-0002-8359-0071

Catalogue record

Date deposited: 05 Sep 2024 16:48
Last modified: 21 Aug 2025 02:33

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Contributors

Author: Sara Mazzilli
Author: Nicola Cocco
Author: Davide Petri
Author: Babak Moazen
Author: Alicia Rosello
Author: Jemima D'Arcy
Author: Emma Plugge ORCID iD
Author: Laura Baglietto
Author: Eva Murauer
Author: Heino Stover
Author: Tassos Trattonikolas
Author: Iakovos Stylianou
Author: Svetlana Doltu
Author: Vlad Busmachiu
Author: Josefina Mavrou
Author: Ionna Yiasemi
Author: Irina Barbiros
Author: FA da Costa
Author: Fadi Meroueh
Author: Roberto Ranieri
Author: Lara Tavoschi

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