“…Compared with jails without a pandemic plan, jails that reported having a pandemic plan were 69% more likely to obtain the influenza vaccine to distribute to residents (95% CI; 1.19, 1.45) (Lee et al, 2014). Ten studies were on COVID-19 vaccination in detention facilities (Brinkley-Rubinstein, Peterson, et al, 2021; Chin, Leidner, et al, 2021; Chin, Leidner, Lamson, et al, 2022; Chin, Leidner, Zhang, et al, 2022; Garcia-Grossman et al, 2022; Goldhaber-Fiebert et al, 2022; Goldman et al, 2022; Hagan et al, 2021; Silverman et al, 2022; Tan et al, 2023). Silverman et al (Silverman et al, 2022), Chin et al (Chin, Leidner, et al, 2021), Chin et al (Chin, Leidner, Zhang, et al, 2022), Brinkley-Rubinstein et al (Brinkley-Rubinstein, Peterson, et al, 2021), and Tan et al (Tan et al, 2023) used cohort study designs to demonstrate that vaccination is an effective strategy for COVID-19 prevention in prisons.…”