When COVID-19 hit, prisons faced a huge challenge: how to keep people safe in tight, crowded spaces. This field report from Puerto Rico describes the steps state prisons there took. It outlines the protocols they implemented for diagnosing, managing, and trying to prevent the spread of the virus.
We don't know how many prisons or people this involved, and the report doesn't share any results about whether these measures actually reduced infections or saved lives. It's purely a description of the actions taken, not an evaluation of their impact. There's no information on safety problems or if the plans were difficult to follow.
Because this is an observational field report and not a formal study, we can't draw conclusions about cause and effect. It doesn't compare these prisons to others without protocols, so we can't say the protocols made a difference. The report simply documents an attempt to respond to a public health crisis in a high-risk setting, leaving the most important question—did it work?—unanswered for now.