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Content

Webinars

WEBINAR: Demystifying 340B for Correctional Institutions

Click here to watch the full webinar

Overview of the 340B Program, Emily McCloskey, NASTAD

Key Issues and Considerations for 340B, Jeff Davis, Baker Donelson

WEBINAR: Strategies for Reducing Risk of Hepatitis B Infection in Correctional Facilities

Click here for the full slide deck

Reducing the Risk of Hepatitis B Virus (HBV) in Corrections, Cara Skillingstead, National Hepatitis Corrections Network

HBV Vaccination Considerations in Corrections, Kelvin McCoy, Dynavax Technologies

Advancing Actionable Strategies and Policy to Reduce HBV Transmission in Corrections, Bill Burke, Rubicon Advisors, LLC

WEBINAR: Litigation in Corrections: Background, Navigation, and Landscape

Link to recording coming soon!

Eliminating Hepatitis C: Critical Interventions in Correctional Settings, Sonia Canzater, O'Neill Institute for National and Global Health Law
HCV Litigation in Corrections: Background, Navigation, and Landscape, Alison Currie, FisherBroyles, LLP.
HCV Litigation in Corrections: A Legal & Moral Analysis, Rob Katz, Indiana University McKinney School of Law
November 2020

WEBINAR: HCV in Corrections: Health Department Partnerships, Tools, and Resources

Link to recording coming soon!

Strengthening Our Programs Through Partnership, Margaret Bordeaux, North Carolina Department of Health and Human Services Injury and Prevention Branch
HCV and Corrections: Health Department Partnerships, Tools, and Resources: HepTAC & 340B, Isabel Lechuga & Lillie Armstrong, NASTAD
HCV Policy Simulation Tool for Prisons, Liesl Hagan, Centers for Disease Control and Prevention Division of Viral Hepatitis
December 2020

WEBINAR: Short Stay Populations: HCV Testing, Treatment, and Linkage to Care

Link to recording coming soon!

Short Stay Populations: HCV Testing, Treatment, and Linkage to Care, Chad Zawitz, Cook County Jail and Cemak Health Services
HCV Testing and Linkage to Care in the Philadelphia Jail System, Lora Magaldi, Philly FIGHT Community Health Centers
Short Stay Populations, HCV Linkage to Care, Jane Crowe, Knox County Health Department
December 2020

WEBINAR: MOUD and HCV Treatment in Justice-Involved Populations

Link to recording coming soon!

MOUD in Jails and Prisons Toolkit, Dana Kurzer-Yashin, National Harm Reduction Coalition
MOUD and Hep C: The Intersection of the Treatment of Opioid Use Disorder and Hepatitis C in a Correctional Setting, Catherine Smith, Washington State Department of Correcions
Healthcare after Incarceration, Laura Morgan, Country Doctor Community Health Centers
December 2020

WEBINAR: HAV in Correctional Settings

HAV Outbreaks 2016-2019, Martha Montgomery, CDC

Hepatitis Outbreak Response and Management, Kevin Runyon, Ohio Department of Rehabilitation and Correction

Responses to Hepatitis A in Local County Jails, Nicole Stone, Indiana State Department of Health

HAV Vaccinations in Jail Populations in Tennessee, Gary Houze and Jane Crowe, Knox County Health Department

WEBINAR: Strategies for HCV Testing and Linkage to Care in and from Prison
Click here to see the slides
Lora Magaldi, Philidelphia FIGHT
Anna Steiner, Transitions Clinic 
Ann Shindo, Oregon Department of Corrections 
Mandy Altman, Hepatitis Education Project
December 2018

WEBINAR: HCV Treatment in Prisons
Annette Gaudino, Treatment Action Group
Mandy Altman, Hepatitis Education Project
October 2017

WEBINAR: Corrections, Drug Pricing, and Hepatitis C: A Systems Analysis and Discussion
Click here to see the slides
Click here to watch the video
Dr. Matthew Akiyama, Montefiore Medical Center/Albert Einstein College of Medicine
Dr. Camilla Graham, Beth Israel Deaconess Medical Center
Rich Feffer, Hepatitis Education Project
June 2016

WEBINAR: Update: Recent Hepatitis C Treatment Lawsuits in State Prisons
Webinar broadcast is available by clicking here: Webinar Video
Gabe Eber, ACLU National Prison Project - PDF Slides
Peter Erlinder and Peter Nickitas, International Humanitarian Law Institute - PDF Slides
Joel Thompson, Prisoner Legal Services of Massachusetts - PDF Slides
July 2015

WEBINAR: Telemedicine and Telehealth in Corrections
Webinar broadcast is available by clicking here: Webinar Video
Melissa Badowski, University of Illinois/Illinois DOC
Karla Thornton, University of New Mexico Project ECHO
Lara Strick, Infectious Disease Physician, WA DOC
February 2015

 


 

Peer Education Programs

The National Hepatitis Corrections Network (NHCN) encourages the implementation of peer-led health education programs in prison and jail settings. Such programs are excellent models for effective health education in correctional settings. If you are interested in implementing a program and want to connect with program managers you may utilize the contact information below or email the corrections network at This email address is being protected from spambots. You need JavaScript enabled to view it.

 

For an overview of peer education in correctional facilities, here are the slides from a five-part peer education panel.


Partners within the National Corrections Hepatitis Network have assembled this directory of peer-based health education programs in state prison systems. While the information below is current, it is by no means complete. If you are aware of any other prison or jail-based peer education programs or would like to submit a program to this list, please send us an email at This email address is being protected from spambots. You need JavaScript enabled to view it. and we will contact the program to gather the information required.

Acknowledgements for their contributions to this project belong to Brad Brockmann and Rosa Sierra of the Center for Prisoner Health and Human Rights and Brown University, Julie Lifshay of the San Francisco AIDS Foundation, Ann Shindo from Oregon DOC, Jude Leahy from the Oregon Department of Health,and Miranda Sedillo, Karla Thornton, and Saul Hernandez from the University of New Mexico. 

If you have any other suggestions for our directory, please let us know. Thank you!

 

Current Programs:

Massachusetts

Program:

Massachusetts Partnership for Correctional Health (MPCH)

Organization:

Massachusetts DOH/DOC-funded program

Contact:

Claudia Gonzales, (508) 735-2451, This email address is being protected from spambots. You need JavaScript enabled to view it.

Location:

Program offered in 17 male facilities and one female facility.

Duration:

2000 - Present

Objective:

To increase education within inmates and staff and incentivize participants to get HIV/HCV testing, while also delivering HCV treatment.

Structure:

This program is a two-part program in which peer educators must first attend a seven-week Health Awareness training before they can participate in the 12-week Peer Education training. Health Awareness training teaches basic information regarding HIV, HCV (treatment, education, access), MRSA, TB, and risk-reduction (needle sharing, safer sex, tattooing, razor sharing, fighting). This class trains about 15-20 students at a time and offers 5 days of “good time” after successful completion. The peer education class trains inmates that have completed the health awareness course and have at least one year in their sentence, making them eligible for an additional 7.5 days of “good time.” The first six weeks of Peer Education training focuses on retraining material learned in the Health Awareness course. The final six weeks focus on presentation skills and practice. Both courses are taught in English and Spanish with an MPCH staff member present.

Evaluation:

N/A

New Mexico

Program:

New Mexico Peer Education Project (NMPEP)

Organization:

Project ECHO, University of New Mexico Health Sciences Center

Contact:

Saul Hernandez, (505) 206-7892, This email address is being protected from spambots. You need JavaScript enabled to view it.

For more info:

Watch a video, read an overview, or view past presentation slides here and here

Location:

Program operates at seven sites throughout New Mexico.

Duration:

2009 – Present

Objective:

To present facts, explore values, and develop skills that protect against common infection and diseases. To work with prison inmates in order to increase knowledge about HCV, HIV, STDs, Staph/MRSA, diabetes, tuberculosis, and addiction. Inmates are trained to identify and find ways to reduce risky behaviors, to improve their communication skills and become skilled health educators for their incarcerated peers in the prison setting.

Structure:

Adapted from Wall Talk: A Training Manual for Texas Department of Criminal Justice Peer Health Educators, NM PEP’s manual is aimed at providing inmates with a 40-hour intensive training on key health topics, basic health literacy and facilitation skills. Each session trains about 12-15 inmates, who then become health educators and resource experts for their incarcerated peers, eligible to teach 10-hour health education sessions presented for other inmates at their location. Peer health educators receive on-going follow-up and training to continue skill and knowledge-building, and to discuss and problem-solve issues, concerns or barriers the peer educators are encountering. Additionally, peer educators participate in monthly videoconferences with Project ECHO staff, content experts, and peer educators from other sites, which allows for sharing of new medical information, resource list building and discussions related to specific training question. Videoconferences provide opportunities for peer educators to collaborate and share teaching strategies.

Evaluation:

NM PEP utilizes questionnaires to measure knowledge, self-efficacy and behavioral intention given before and after 40-hour training. Knowledge questionnaires are administered before and after 10 hour classes led by peer educators. Qualitative data for focus groups and individual interviews are available.

 

Washington

Program:

Project SHIELD (Self-Help in Eliminating Life-Threatening Diseases)

Organization:

Hepatitis Education Project (WA DOC funded)

Contact:

Mandy Altman, (206) 732-0311, This email address is being protected from spambots. You need JavaScript enabled to view it.

Location:

Program held in one male facility and one female facility: Stafford Creek Correctional Center men’s facility and Washington Correction Center for Women.

Duration:

2012 - Present

Objective:

To train current inmates in prisons to talk to peers about risk/harm reduction in regards to hepatitis C and HIV in order to reduce transmission. The coourse simultaneously teaches communication skills and harm reduction skills, focusing on safer drug use, safer tattooing and safer sexual practices.

Structure:

This 12-hour training program focuses on small groups (4-12 inmates per training) utilizing 6 two-hour training sessions and is offered for two cycles every per facility year. Peer educators do not teach their own classes upon completion of the program; however, they are given certificates and are equipped with tools to facilitate educational discussions within their own social and familial networks.

Evaluation:

Project SHIELD utilizes qualitative feedback forms as well as pre and post surveys.

Past Programs:

California

Program:

Centerforce Peer Health Education Program (PHEP)

Organization:

Centerforce (community-based)

Contact:

Julie Lifshay, (415) 487-3056, This email address is being protected from spambots. You need JavaScript enabled to view it.

Website:

http://centerforce1.org/category/resources/education/hepatitis-peer-health-education-tools/

Location:

Program held in three institutions: San Quentin State Prison, Central California Women's Facility, and Valley State Prison for Women.

Duration:

2008-2013

Objective:

To develop a Hep C Peer Based Education program specifically for “people in prison by people in prison.” Several workshops were coordinated by peer educators and Centerforce staff to deliver information regarding Hep C prevention and management in correctional settings.

Structure:

Consisted of a small group of peer educators. PHEP utilized several education tools and games to facilitate workshops such as video and poster series, “Hepardy!” game, and Hepatitis Roulette.

Evaluation:

PHEP utilized some pre and post tests, along with yearly results.


Harm Reduction in Prisons and Jails

~ General ~

Jail-Based Overdose Prevention Education Toolkit, North Carolina Harm Reduction Coalition

The Contiuum of Hepatitis C Care for Criminal Justice Involved Adults, Hochstatter et al, Health and Justice Journal, 2017 

Overview of Harm Reduction in Prisons in Seven European Countries, Sander et al, Harm Reduction Journal, 2016

Drug Treatment and Harm Reduction in Prisons, Stover and Kastelic, Prisons and Health Report (WHO), 2014

Harm Reduction Behind Bars: Prison Worker Perspectives, Miller et al, SAGE Open, 2013

Is Harm Reduction Possible in Prisons?, Feffer, Hepatitis Education Project, 2012

Harm Reduction in Prison: The Moldova Model, Hoover and Jurgens, Open Society Institue, 2009

~ Syringe Access ~

On Point: Recommendations for Prison-based Needle and Syringe Programs in Canada, Meulen et al, 2016

The International Experience with Syringe Access in Prisons: Current Practices, Lessons Learned for the US (PowerPoint), Reynolds and Feffer, 2016

Under the Skin: A People's Case for Prison Needle and Syringe Programs, Canadian HIV/AIDS, 2010

Clean Switch: The Case for Prison Needle and Syringe Programs in Canada, Canadian HIV/AIDS Legal Action Network, 2009

Moving Beyond Non-Engagement on Regulated Needle-Syringe Exchange Programs in Australian Prisons, Mogg and Levy, Harm Reduction Journal, 2009

The Case for Prison Needle and Syringe Programs (PowerPoint), Chu, Canadian HIV/AIDS Legal Network, 2008

Needle and Syringe Programs and Bleach in Prisons: Reviewing the Evidence, Canadian HIV/AIDS Legal Network, 2008

Prison Needle Exchange: Lessons from A Comprehensive Review of International Evidence and Experience, Canadian HIV/AIDS Legal Network, 2006

~ Condom Distribution ~

Risk, Feasibility, and Cost Evaluation of a Prisoner Condom Access Pilot Program in One California State Prison, Lucas et al, Journal of Correctional Health Care, 2014

A Condom Distribution Program in the Los Angeles Men’s Central Jail: Sheriff Deputies’ Attitudes and Opinions, McCuller and Harawa, Journal of Correctional Health Care, 2014

Access to Condoms in U.S. Prisons, McLemore, HIV/AIDS Policy & Law Review, 2008

~ Tattooing ~

Harm Reduction and Prisoners: Mitigating Risk and Improving Health, John Howard Society of Ontario, 2009

Prison Tattoo Program Wasn't Given Enough Time, Kondro, CMAJ, 2007


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