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Research Article| Volume 125, P138-144, December 2022

Testing for COVID-19 during an outbreak within a large UK prison: an evaluation of mass testing to inform outbreak control

Open AccessPublished:October 16, 2022DOI:https://doi.org/10.1016/j.ijid.2022.10.018

      Highlights

      • Systematic mass testing in closed settings provides information on infection rates.
      • Test positivity was 11.6%, with only one-quarter reporting symptoms.
      • The prison wing handling new admissions reported the second-lowest positivity rate.
      • Testing uptake was higher in residents than in staff members.
      • Mass testing is a valuable tool to bring outbreaks under control quickly.

      Abstract

      Objectives

      The aim of this paper was to describe the results of mass asymptomatic testing for COVID-19 in a male prison in England following the declaration of an outbreak. It provides novel data on the implementation of a mass testing regime within a prison during the pandemic.

      Methods

      The paper is an observational evaluation of the mass testing conducted for 6 months following the declaration of a COVID-19 outbreak within a prison. It investigated the incidence of positive cases in both staff and residents using polymerase chain reaction testing.

      Results

      Data from October 2020 until March 2021 was included. A total of 2170 tests were performed by 851 residents and 182 staff members; uptake was 48.3% for people living in prison and 30.4% for staff. Overall test positivity was 11.6% (14.3% for residents, 3.0% for staff), with around one-quarter of these reporting symptoms. The prison wing handling new admissions reported the second-lowest positivity rate (9.4%) of the eight wings.

      Conclusion

      Mass testing for COVID-19 over a short space of time can lead to rapid identification of additional cases, particularly asymptomatic cases. Testing that relies on residents and staff reporting symptoms will underestimate the true extent of transmission and will likely lead to a prolonged outbreak.

      Keywords

      Introduction

      COVID-19 and prisons

      Since the first cases were identified in 2019, COVID-19 has caused a global pandemic which has disrupted economies and caused significant morbidity and mortality. With COVID-19 predominantly spread through aerosols and those in close contact at the highest risk, concern was voiced that institutions such as prisons would be at risk of large outbreaks (
      • Burki T.
      Prisons are “in no way equipped” to deal with COVID-19.
      ), exacerbated by overcrowding and poor health of imprisoned people (
      • Davies M
      • Rolewicz L
      • Schlepper L
      • Fagunwa F.
      Locked out? Prisoners’ use of hospital care.
      ;
      • Fazel S
      • Hope T
      • O'Donnell I
      • Piper M
      • Jacoby R
      Health of elderly male prisoners: worse than the general population, worse than younger prisoners.
      ). Coupled with difficulties implementing basic infection prevention and control measures because of limited access to handwashing points, crowded conditions, little control over social distancing, and movement of both staff and people, it was expected that prisons would become a hotspot for COVID-19 outbreaks (
      • Burki T.
      Prisons are “in no way equipped” to deal with COVID-19.
      ). In England, an estimated 2700 deaths of people living in prison were projected if no regime changes were introduced (
      • O'Moore E
      • Farrar J.
      Briefing paper-interim assessment of impact of various population management strategies in prisons in response to COVID-19 pandemic in England.
      ).

      Infection prevention and control in prisons in England during the pandemic

      Despite the development of a World Health Organization COVID-19 Prisons Checklist to help prisons prepare for potential outbreaks from the early months of the pandemic (
      World health organization
      Checklist to evaluate preparedness, prevention and control of COVID-19 in prisons and other places of detention. Geneva: World Health Organization. Regional Office for.
      ), and countries holding pandemic preparedness exercises (such as Operation Cygnus in the UK [
      • Loveday H
      • Wilson J.
      Pandemic preparedness and the role of infection prevention and control–how do we learn?.
      ]), many COVID-19 outbreaks were observed in prisons and places of detention (
      • Ryckman T
      • Chin ET
      • Prince L
      • Leidner D
      • Long E
      • Studdert DM
      • et al.
      Outbreaks of COVID-19 variants in US prisons: a mathematical modelling analysis of vaccination and reopening policies.
      ). These led to further restrictions often being enforced (
      House of Commons Justice Committee
      Coronavirus (COVID-19): the impact on prisons: government response to the Committee's fourth report of session 2019-21.
      ), including limiting contact with not only peers but also visitors and staff and stopping all education, training, and employment activities (except for essential workers). Access was restricted to gym, religious association, and general association, with residents allowed out of cells to shower and exercise once per day, with limits placed on numbers unlocked and in exercise yards to enable social distancing. Mask-wearing was mandatory for staff and residents.
      England introduced measures including specific cohort units for protective isolation, shielding units, and reverse cohorting (
      • Coleman PC
      • Pailing A
      • Roy A
      • O'Moore É
      • Chandan JS
      • Lumby V
      • et al.
      Implementation of novel and conventional outbreak control measures in managing COVID-19 outbreaks in a large UK prison.
      ;
      • O'Moore E
      • Farrar J.
      Briefing paper-interim assessment of impact of various population management strategies in prisons in response to COVID-19 pandemic in England.
      ), as well as compartmentalization: significantly reducing transfers between prisons (

      Park K, Blakinger K, Lauer C. A half-million people got COVID-19 in prison. Are officials ready for the next pandemic? Available at: https://www.themarshallproject.org/2021/06/30/a-half-million-people-got-covid-19-in-prison-are-officials-ready-for-the-next-pandemic, 2021. Accessed March 11, 2022.

      ) and limiting to single-cell accommodation within the prison where possible, coupled with calls for early release or fewer custodial sentences (
      • Henry BF.
      Reducing COVID-19 outbreaks in prisons through public health-centred policies.
      ;
      • Reinhart E
      • Chen DL.
      Incarceration and its disseminations: COVID-19 pandemic lessons from Chicago's Cook County Jail.
      ).
      Outbreaks in prisons can be rapidly contained with effective outbreak management (
      • Wilburn J
      • Blakey E
      • Trindall A
      • Burr H
      • Tanti V
      • Doolan S
      • et al.
      COVID-19 within a large UK prison with a high number of vulnerable adults, march to June 2020: an outbreak investigation and screening event.
      ) and testing asymptomatic people to contain outbreaks and reduce further spread (
      • Lambert S
      • Wilkinson D.
      Trust, efficacy and ethicacy when testing prisoners for COVID-19.
      ;
      • Malloy GSP
      • Puglisi L
      • Brandeau ML
      • Harvey TD
      • Wang EA.
      Effectiveness of interventions to reduce COVID-19 transmission in a large urban jail: a model-based analysis.
      ). Mass asymptomatic testing has been implemented in particular contexts and settings, including in China (
      • Zhou Y
      • Jiang H
      • Wang Q
      • Yang M
      • Chen Y
      • Jiang Q.
      Use of contact tracing, isolation, and mass testing to control transmission of COVID-19 in China.
      ) and in establishments with a high risk of transmission, such as hospitals (
      • Reid RJ
      • Rosella L
      • Milijasevic N
      • Small LN.
      Mass testing for asymptomatic COVID-19 infection among health care workers at a large Canadian hospital.
      ) and schools (
      • Torjesen I.
      What do we know about lateral flow tests and mass testing in schools?.
      ). However, mass asymptomatic testing was not available until months after the start of the pandemic, and must consider frequency, the test used, and the accompanying public health measures, as well as balancing these with the disruption to the prison regime, the risk of harm from false negative and positive results, and the financial cost (
      • Lambert S
      • Wilkinson D.
      Trust, efficacy and ethicacy when testing prisoners for COVID-19.
      ).

      Mass testing for COVID-19 in prisons in England

      In outbreak situations from autumn 2020 until March 2022, testing guidance from the Ministry of Justice and Public Health England (now the UK Health Security Agency) was for both lateral flow tests and polymerase chain reaction (PCR) testing to be used (
      UK Health Security Agency and Ministry of Justice
      Preventing and controlling outbreaks of COVID-19 in prisons and places of detention.
      ), with all consenting residents tested regardless of whether or not symptomatic. PCR samples were processed by the local Lighthouse Laboratory using the ThermoFisher TaqPath™ COVID-19 test for the detection of SARS-CoV-2 (
      • Gravagnuolo AM
      • Faqih L
      • Cronshaw C
      • Wynn J
      • Klapper P
      • Wigglesworth M.
      High throughput diagnostics and dynamic risk assessment of SARS-CoV-2 variants of concern.
      ). The interval for this ‘mass testing’ was advised as follows:
      • At day 0 (the first day mass testing is available)
      • Between days 5 and 7
      • On day 28, after the last confirmed or suspected case. This was changed to 14 days in January 2022.
      Regular staff testing was also recommended to prevent the incursion of infection. Staff were encouraged to test twice weekly with lateral flow tests and once a week with a PCR test.
      This paper describes the results of a mass testing regime implemented in a male prison in the North West of England following the identification of a COVID-19 outbreak using the testing regime recommended above. It was implemented within a wider routine testing program for symptomatic residents, which is also reported here. This paper provides novel data on the operational implementation of a testing regime within an English prison during the COVID-19 pandemic.

      Methods

      Setting

      This paper describes a COVID-19 outbreak in a local Category B (second-highest level of security) closed male prison in the North West of England with a capacity of 750 residents, holding people on remand and sentenced who have been admitted from the community via the courts or transferred in from other prisons. It is a Victorian radial design prison, organized into seven accommodation wings subdivided into spurs.

      Participants

      Eligible participants were all residents within the establishment and all staff members working at the facility. In addition to residents already held within the establishment at the start of the outbreak, this also included new arrivals from court and those transferred from other prisons.
      Staff members included prison officers and those who worked in allied areas such as education, temporary staff employed by agencies, and those employed by external healthcare providers. Symptomatic staff were advised not to come to work and had the opportunity to undergo testing in the community outside of prison testing.
      Those who had previously tested positive for COVID-19 in the 90 days before testing did not receive a further PCR test, in line with national guidance (
      UK Health Security Agency and Ministry of Justice
      Preventing and controlling outbreaks of COVID-19 in prisons and places of detention.
      ).

      Design

      This service evaluation investigated the incidence of positive cases during a COVID-19 outbreak in an English prison, following the recommended asymptomatic national testing regime for prisons at that time (
      UK Health Security Agency and Ministry of Justice
      Preventing and controlling outbreaks of COVID-19 in prisons and places of detention.
      ).

      Materials

      Following the declaration of an outbreak by the outbreak control team on October 21, 2020, mass testing capacity was mobilized as soon as was feasible and began on November 7, 2020. PCR testing was conducted using a nose and throat swab test on asymptomatic staff and residents.
      PCR test results were linked to existing datasets: Prison National Offender Management Information System (p-NOMIS) for residents and human resources records for staff. These datasets held information on demographics and roles within the prison (for staff). Presence of COVID-19 symptoms was also recorded. The national COVID-19 case definition was used (
      UK Health Security Agency
      COVID-19: investigation and initial clinical management of possible cases.
      ).

      Data analysis

      In addition to the mass testing of residents, data were also collected from the wider, routine symptomatic testing program occurring concurrently and the asymptomatic staff testing program conducted from November 7. Symptomatology and laboratory results were reported into a central system linked to demographic data and exported to Excel. Data on residents were held within the p-NOMIS records system, and data on staff were held by the prison management system. Data were shared for analysis using a secure, encrypted method and stored on a secure server at Public Health England. Descriptive epidemiology and statistical tests were conducted using Excel. Chi-square test was used as independence of participants at each round of testing was assumed due to the rapid turnover of people living in the prison. Clopper-Pearson exact test was used to calculate 95% confidence intervals of testing positivity. Uptake of testing used the number of residents and the total number of staff in the establishment at the midpoint of the mass testing period as the denominators.

      Ethics

      Participation in the testing program was voluntary, and there were no repercussions for those who opted not to be tested. No ethical approval was required as this was a service evaluation which collected data to monitor the outbreak.

      Results

      The first positive test was recorded on October 13, 2020, with analyses including data from October 12, 2020, until March 20, 2021. This includes routine testing conducted on symptomatic prison residents and tests on asymptomatic prison staff who were participating in the routine staff testing program, in addition to the mass testing implemented following the outbreak declaration. A total of 2170 unique tests were performed, consisting of 1639 tests performed by 851 residents and 531 by 182 staff members. Results from the wider routine testing program for symptomatic residents are reported first, including the scheduled mass testing program, followed by the results of the mass testing program alone.
      For residents receiving testing, the median age was 33 years (range 18-89 years, IQR 26-42). For staff, the average age was 46 years (range 21-70 years, IQR 37-54).
      The number of tests conducted, response rate and test positivity by resident or staff is listed in Table 1. The total number of positive tests was 252, giving an overall test positivity of 11.6%. Response rates are calculated from the average number of tests conducted monthly and use the monthly population statistics for residents (679) and staff members (349) from the midpoint of evaluation.
      Table 1Test positivity by residents and staff members.
      GroupTests (n)Response rate (%)Positive (n)Negative (n)Other (n)
      Test was inconclusive, unreadable or unknown (result not returned)
      Test positivity (%)
      Residents163948.323613841914.4
      Staff53130.41651503.0
      Total217042.225218991911.6
      a Test was inconclusive, unreadable or unknown (result not returned)
      Positive tests performed by residents and staff are shown in Figure 1. Gray arrows indicate the dates of the start of the scheduled mass testing as per the testing schedule and denote when testing was scheduled to take place.
      Figure 1
      Figure 1Positive tests performed by residents and staff.

      Resident testing

      Location details were available for 1205 (97.0%) tests carried out by residents (Table 2). The highest test positivity was seen on G wing (24.6%), followed by B wing (20.9%) and D wing (16.9%). No positive tests were returned by residents on H wing.
      Table 2Positive tests of residents, by location.
      LocationPositive (n)Negative (n)Other (n)Total (n)Test positivity
      A wing56287334616.2%
      B wing62235029720.9%
      C wing52491135569.4%
      D wing43210225516.9%
      F wing84615514.5%
      G wing154606124.6%
      H wing0320320.0%
      Other
      No location given, or location given as “outside”
      0370370.0%
      Total236138419163914.4%
      a No location given, or location given as “outside”
      Positive tests performed by residents, by location and over time are shown in Figure 2. Although the majority of positive tests were initially from different wings, there was a clear peak on D wing around day 26 (the first day of mass testing as per the schedule), followed by a large number of positive tests from A wing on day 27. After this, the majority of infections appeared to be contained within B wing until the end of the asymptomatic mass testing, whereby it remained at a low level on C wing until the end of the period of evaluation. Two spurs of C wing were used as the reverse cohorting unit. Additional information on infection rates within spurs are shown in Table 1, Supplementary Materials.
      Figure 2
      Figure 2Positive tests, by day number and location, for people living in the establishment. Dates of additional testing are shown by gray arrows.
      Of 235 cases among residents, 63 (26.8%) of these were symptomatic. For staff, four staff members from 16 cases (25%) were symptomatic.

      Staff testing

      Data from staff testing by role (Table 3) shows the highest test positivity was in prison officers (6.3%), followed by staff working in healthcare (2.7%). No positive tests were returned by those working for external agencies. Symptomatic staff would have been eligible for testing in the community as per national guidance.
      Table 3Test results and test positivity by staff group.
      Staff groupPositive tests (n)Negative tests (n)TotalTest positivity
      Health staff272742.7%
      Agency staff01111110.0%
      Prison service staff (officer)111641756.3%
      Prison service staff (other)31681711.8%
      Total165155313.0%
      The timing of staff tests is shown in Figure 3. The number of tests was greatest following the start of the asymptomatic mass testing but remained relatively constant from around day 40 onwards. Positive tests were returned at all stages of the evaluation, with no obvious peaks. It should be noted that staff testing did not start until day 29 of the outbreak, 3 days after the asymptomatic mass testing for residents.
      Figure 3
      Figure 3Test results (staff only), by day of testing (note: testing for staff started on day 29 of wider testing).
      The positive tests by day of testing and divided into residents or staff (Figure 1) show a steady number of positive tests, albeit a low number, until day 26. At this point, there was a sharp increase. Cases then dropped quickly, with a smaller peak on day 39 and a large number on day 59. The majority of cases were seen in residents.

      Test positivity by testing round

      As described previously, mass testing was also conducted in line with government recommendations, using days 0, 7, and 28. In this testing schedule, day 0 was set as November 7, 2020, day 7 as November 14, 2020, and day 28 as December 5, 2020, although there were some delays: up to 4 days to conduct mass testing for day 0 tests, up to 5 days for day 7 tests, and up to 13 days for day 28 tests. The number of tests conducted by day, and results, are detailed in Table 4, which is a subset of the larger dataset described above. All test results reported here are in residents, and no staff were included.
      Table 4Scheduled mass testing results, reported by day and test result.
      Day of testingPositive tests (n)Negative tests (n)Other results
      Unknown (results not received), inconclusive or unable to read
      (n)
      Total tests (n)Test positivity
      Test positivity was calculated using only valid (positive or negative) test results
      Lower 95% CIUpper 95% CI
      Day 01194031353522.8%19.3%26.6%
      Day 71230593263.8%2.0%6.5%
      Day 281738994154.2%2.6%6.9%
      Total1481,097311,27612.9%11.0%15.0%
      a Unknown (results not received), inconclusive or unable to read
      b Test positivity was calculated using only valid (positive or negative) test results
      The test positivity was highest on the first round of testing (22.8%), but this dropped sharply in the second round to 3.8% and was 4.2% in the final round. Significant differences were found using chi-square test of independence between the proportion of positive tests on day 0 and day 7 (X2 = 54.10, P <0.0001) and between the proportion of positive tests on day 0 and day 28 (X2 = 61.41, P <0.0001), but there was no significant difference observed between positive tests on day 7 and day 28 (X2 = 0.18, P <0.670).

      Discussion

      The pattern of COVID-19 cases is in keeping with a propagated outbreak, as seen in other custodial establishments (
      • Wilburn J
      • Blakey E
      • Trindall A
      • Burr H
      • Tanti V
      • Doolan S
      • et al.
      COVID-19 within a large UK prison with a high number of vulnerable adults, march to June 2020: an outbreak investigation and screening event.
      ). The increase in cases between days 26 and 30 corresponds to the first round of the mass testing scheduled as per the national guidance. This spike in cases shows how mass testing can lead to rapid identification of additional cases, particularly asymptomatic cases. The usual reproduction number of SARS-CoV-2 is just under three (
      • Billah MA
      • Miah MM
      • Khan MN.
      Reproductive number of coronavirus: a systematic review and meta-analysis based on global level evidence.
      ), but the Diamond Princess cruise ship outbreak reported a reproductive number of 14.8 (
      • Rocklöv J
      • Sjödin H
      • Wilder-Smith A.
      COVID-19 outbreak on the Diamond Princess cruise ship: estimating the epidemic potential and effectiveness of public health countermeasures.
      ), and the relatively closed environment of prison can be seen to have some similarities to those on a cruise ship. Implementation of infection prevention and control (IPC) measures should prevent these scenarios (
      • O'Moore E
      • Farrar J.
      Briefing paper-interim assessment of impact of various population management strategies in prisons in response to COVID-19 pandemic in England.
      ,) but situations may arise when these are not possible. In the case of this prison, it may have been exacerbated by layout and environment, making IPC measures and good ventilation difficult.
      Only about one in four cases had reported symptoms. This demonstrates that relying on residents and staff to report symptoms will underestimate the true extent of the outbreak, leading to further transmission and a prolonged outbreak, meaning that stricter IPC measures must be enforced for a longer time. This is likely to have a negative impact on the mental well-being of prison residents (
      • Johnson L
      • Gutridge K
      • Parkes J
      • Roy A
      • Plugge E.
      Scoping review of mental health in prisons through the COVID-19 pandemic.
      ).
      If infections were introduced by new entrants, the highest rate of infection would have been seen on C wing, specifically spurs C1 and C2, which were used as the reverse cohorting unit where many imprisoned people would spend their first nights in the prison. However, the rate of infection on this wing was lower than all but one of the wings, suggesting asymptomatic infection within the establishment was unlikely to have been introduced by the new entrants to the prison. Staff are the most likely source of infection, with one study using sequencing information showing multiple introductions of the virus into the prison from the community (

      Czachorowski M, Bashton M, O'Moore É, McGrath N, Smith D, Gutridge K, et al. Repeated mass testing of staff and residents in prison outbreaks of COVID-19: an enhanced outbreak investigation in two adult prisons in England, 2021. medRxiv. Available at: https://www.medrxiv.org/content/10.1101/2022.06.13.22276319v1. Accessed June 14, 2022.

      ). Although the positivity rate was slightly higher on C1 than other spurs on the same wing, C2 had a lower positivity rate in testing than another spur that was not used for reverse cohorting.
      The national recommendations when this service evaluation took place stated that mass testing should take place as soon as an outbreak is declared (‘day 0’), 7 days later (‘day 7’) and 28 days after the putative last case (this was later changed to 14 days after the last case). It can be difficult to adhere strictly to testing schedules, particularly where there are large numbers of people to test and short intervals between cycles. It is a huge logistical challenge to mobilize testing at short notice, particularly in a large national prison system and when there is competition for mass testing procedures. Furthermore, when there are nearly 1000 people to be tested, and particularly where there are restrictions on movement, this can be difficult to undertake in a single day. However, it is a valuable tool in providing a systematic method of testing to identify cases where testing of symptomatic people or contacts will miss a large proportion of cases. In a prison environment, it may be more pragmatic to treat individual wings as separate environments, with each wing having its own schedule. However, data from this evaluation suggests that if one wing is affected, it is likely that there will be infected individuals across the whole prison.
      Key challenges have been highlighted in the literature for mass testing in prisons: assumed participation of consent, test administration, and technological barriers (
      • Lambert S
      • Wilkinson D.
      Trust, efficacy and ethicacy when testing prisoners for COVID-19.
      ). With the implementation of national guidelines and increasing testing capacity within the UK, technological barriers had minimal impact, but test administration is likely to have been a significant challenge to the testing schedule and may explain testing needing to be implemented over several days. In England, UK Health Security Agency has worked with Her Majesty's Prison and Probation Service, National Health Services (NHS) England and NHS Improvement to enable the rapid mobilization of mass testing units to help the local services in conducting the necessary testing.
      Another issue is that of uptake: our evaluation showed poor response rate to testing. It should be noted that the figure reported for residents (48.3%) was likely to have been affected by the transient population of the prison. This would not have affected staff members, whose uptake was even lower (30.4%). This is a key issue for both prevention of infection incursion and outbreak control; measures such as reverse cohorting can mitigate the risk of introducing infection from incoming residents, but staff are likely to introduce infection from the community and can introduce infection to several areas of the prison estate (
      • Kinner SA
      • Young JT
      • Snow K
      • Southalan L
      • Lopez-Acuña D
      • Ferreira-Borges C
      • et al.
      Prisons and custodial settings are part of a comprehensive response to COVID-19.
      ). The number of staff entering and leaving the prison into the community is also much greater than the number of residents entering and leaving the prison. Infection rates in prison staff have been found to more closely mirror that of the prison they work in than their local community (
      • Nowotny KM
      • Seide K
      • Brinkley-Rubinstein L.
      Risk of COVID-19 infection among prison staff in the United States.
      ), and so asymptomatic testing needs much higher uptake and coverage of staff members to be effective. It is not surprising that this outbreak occurred at a time when the prevalence of COVID was highest in North West of England (

      Office for National Statistics. Coronavirus (COVID-19) infection survey: England. Available at: https://www.ons.gov.uk/peoplepopulationandcommunity/healthandsocialcare/conditionsanddiseases/datasets/coronaviruscovid19infectionsurveydata/2020, 2020. Accessed November 15, 2021.

      ), and also covers the period where the Alpha variant became the dominant variant throughout England, which may have exacerbated the outbreak further, though cases in the prison do not mirror the regional trend in North West England at this time (see Figure 4). This may suggest that establishments such as prisons may amplify the spread of viruses even before marked peaks in community transmission are observed, as has been described in other prison outbreaks (
      • Duarte C
      • Cameron DB
      • Kwan AT
      • Bertozzi SM
      • Williams BA
      • McCoy SI.
      COVID-19 outbreak in a state prison: a case study on the implementation of key public health recommendations for containment and prevention.
      ;
      • Henry BF.
      Reducing COVID-19 outbreaks in prisons through public health-centred policies.
      ;
      • Vicente-Alcalde N
      • Ruescas-Escolano E
      • Franco-Paredes C
      • Tuells J.
      Control of a COVID-19 outbreak in a Spanish prison: lessons learned in outbreak control.
      ), with prisons being described as “epicenters of transmission to the community” in some circumstances (
      • Henry BF.
      Reducing COVID-19 outbreaks in prisons through public health-centred policies.
      ).
      Figure 4
      Figure 4Positive tests performed by residents and staff in prison, and positive tests in North West England during the same period. Source for North West England data:
      UK Health Security Agency
      COVID-19: investigation and initial clinical management of possible cases.
      .

      Strengths and limitations

      This paper is the first in the published literature to evaluate the recommendation of testing on days 0, 7, and 28 to provide a structured testing regimen during a COVID-19 outbreak in prison. It has shown that despite logistical challenges to implementation, particularly in larger establishments with transient populations, it is possible to implement a testing protocol to detect asymptomatic cases in a methodical manner and implement control measures.
      The dataset had a good level of completeness, allowing robust evaluation of testing. The only exception was relating to symptomatology. There is a risk that residents would under-report the presence of symptoms as this may lead to greater restrictions on their movement and more time in isolation. For staff, there may be a perceived lack of incentive to report symptoms (or participate in testing) as they would be unable to work extra hours and earn overtime, or there may be repercussions for the staff member's household contacts who may have to isolate in line with the guidance at that time.
      Additional questions would have been useful, particularly to identify reasons for those who opted out of testing, as this would allow concerns to be addressed and could increase the uptake of testing. This information would also be valuable in investigating any possible selection bias, as it was not possible to say whether uptake was higher among particular groups. Likewise, in those being tested, additional questions around hand washing and respiratory etiquette, and the number of daily contacts, would have been useful to examine whether certain behaviors are linked to asymptomatic cases, and if additional measures could be put in place to reduce the risk of onward transmission. This would also need to take into account the prison regime.
      The results presented in this service evaluation are purely those from the symptomatic testing program delivered from October 12, 2020, and the asymptomatic mass testing from November 7, 2020. During this time, different results systems were in place to record test results depending on the testing method: any staff member who was symptomatic would have had the opportunity to undertake PCR testing in the community, and any residents who were transferred to a hospital would have received tests in secondary care. Due to this, not all cases are necessarily captured in this dataset.

      Implications of the paper

      This evaluation has shown that it is possible to conduct a mass testing program within a wider program of testing for infectious diseases in custodial environments as part of outbreak management. While there can be operational constraints to administering mass testing over a large population, mass testing at set intervals can provide valuable information about the presence of infection within a closed setting and attempt to bring it under control quicker. Given the high proportion of asymptomatic infection in this population, mass testing of the whole prison is recommended to ensure that all cases are identified. Without the identification of such cases and the institution of appropriate IPC measures, the outbreak is likely to be prolonged, with asymptomatic cases acting as a reservoir for spread across the prison and potentially into the community through transmission to prison staff.

      Declaration of competing interest

      The authors have no competing interests to declare.

      Funding

      This research did not receive any specific grant from funding agencies in the public, commercial or not-for-profit sectors.

      Ethical approval

      This paper reports a service evaluation and as such, it is exempt from ethical approval.

      Author contributions

      EP, MC and CB were responsible for design and ongoing development. CB handled the data and drafted the manuscript. MC provided guidance on data management and feedback on initial drafts of the manuscript. EP and EF provided feedback on the manuscript, with EP and EM responsible for final review.

      Appendix. Supplementary materials

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