Carceral settings in the United States have been the source of many single site COVID-19 outbreaks. Quarantine is a strategy used to mitigate the spread of COVID-19 in correctional settings, and specific quarantine practices differ state to state. To better understand how states are using quarantine in prisons, we reviewed each state’s definition of quarantine and compared each state’s definition to the Centers for Disease Control’s (CDC) definition and recommendations for quarantine in jails and prisons. Most prison systems, 45 of 53, define quarantine, but definitions vary widely. No state published definitions of quarantine that align with all CDC recommendations, and only 9 states provide quarantine data. In these states, the highest recorded quarantine rate occurred in Ohio in May 2020 at 843 per 1,000. It is necessary for prison systems to standardize their definitions of quarantine and to utilize quarantine practices in accordance with CDC recommendations. In addition, data transparency is needed to better understand the use of quarantine and its effectiveness at mitigating COVID-19 outbreaks in carceral settings.
The Tsai–Wu Quadratic Failure Criterion is a modified tensor polynomial criterion, that is widely used and the most readily accepted failure criterion for orthotropic materials. While it is an excellent criterion for the majority of composite structures, there is limited experimental validation of this criterion when predicting the failure envelope for “combined shear” failures or, better stated, failures that involve both 2-D (in-plane) and 3-D (out-of-plane) shear stresses in an orthotropic material or laminate. Since several common types of material failure involve complex stress states, the ability to incorporate the effect of 3-D shear stress into failure prediction is attractive. The 3-D Tsai–Wu quadratic failure criterion that incorporates multiple shear stresses is presented in this text and tests were conducted on several laminate specimens in an effort to validate this criterion. Failure load predictions were made to validate the modified 3-D criterion and compare the results with the 2-D Tsai–Wu criterion for specialized cases where multiple shear stresses were present at failure. This testing clearly shows strong agreement between the 3-D criterion’s predictions and experiments for these cases, implying that the standard 2-D Tsai–Wu quadratic failure criterion can be safely extended, through the addition of terms, to 3-D cases.
Objectives Our objectives were to document data availability and reporting on suicide mortality in state prison systems. The United States leads the world in mass incarceration, a structural determinant of health, but lacks real-time reporting of prison health statistics. This absence is particularly notable in suicides, a leading cause of death that carceral policies play a key role in mitigating. Methods Suicide data for each state prison system from 2017–2021 were gathered through statistical reports, press releases, and Freedom of Information Act requests. We graded states based on data availability. Results Only sixteen states provide updated, frequent, granular, freely provided suicide data. An additional thirteen states provided frequently updated data but that had little granularity, was incomplete, or was not freely provided. Eight states provided sparse, infrequent, or outdated data, and thirteen provided no data at all. Conclusions The 2000 Death in Custody Reporting Act requires that states provide these data freely, yet the majority of states do not. There is a need for reliable, real-time data on suicides, suicide attempts, and conditions of confinement to better understand the harms of the carceral system and to advocate for change.
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