Infectious Disease in Correctional Medicine
Infectious disease is one of the highest-yield areas in correctional medicine. Correctional facilities concentrate patients with:
- limited prior healthcare access
- substance use disorders
- homelessness
- psychiatric illness
- crowded living conditions
- interrupted medical treatment
As a result, you will see far more:
- hepatitis C
- HIV
- skin infections
- STIs
- MRSA
- TB exposure
- injection-related infections
than in many standard outpatient practices.
In women’s correctional facilities especially, infectious disease often overlaps with:
- prior IV drug use
- sexual trauma
- survival sex work
- unstable housing
- substance use
- untreated chronic disease
Your job as a correctional GP is not necessarily to become an infectious disease specialist. Your role is to:
- recognize infections early
- identify emergencies
- understand screening protocols
- restart interrupted treatment
- prevent outbreaks
- know when specialty referral is needed
A major theme in correctional medicine is identifying patients who have gone years without consistent healthcare.
1. HIV Basics
You should be comfortable with the basics of HIV care.
Important areas
Know:
- HIV screening
- opportunistic infection basics
- ART basics
- CD4 count concepts
- viral load concepts
- transmission risks
- postexposure considerations
Correctional relevance
Many incarcerated patients:
- were never tested
- stopped ART before incarceration
- lost follow-up
- have poor medication adherence histories
Incarceration may be the first stable environment where HIV treatment becomes consistent.
HIV Screening
Routine HIV screening is very important in corrections.
Many patients are asymptomatic.
Know risk factors:
- IV drug use
- unprotected sex
- transactional sex
- prior incarceration
- untreated STIs
ART Basics
You do not need detailed infectious disease fellowship-level HIV knowledge, but you should understand:
- ART should generally not be interrupted unnecessarily
- adherence is critical
- resistance develops with inconsistent treatment
Common practical issue
Patients may not know their regimen.
You often need:
- outside pharmacy verification
- old records
- ID consultation
Opportunistic Infection Red Flags
Know symptoms concerning for advanced HIV:
- thrush
- chronic diarrhea
- weight loss
- recurrent pneumonia
- fevers
- neurologic symptoms
Important principle
Do not assume all HIV patients are critically immunocompromised. Many are well-controlled on ART.
2. Hepatitis B and Hepatitis C
Extremely common in correctional populations.
Especially among:
- prior IV drug users
- patients with unstable housing
- patients with poor healthcare access
Hepatitis C
Very high yield.
Know:
- screening basics
- chronic hepatitis complications
- cirrhosis signs
- transmission
- treatment basics
Correctional relevance
Many incarcerated patients have untreated chronic hepatitis C.
Some were:
- diagnosed years ago
- never treated
- lost to follow-up
Important complications
Know signs of advanced liver disease:
- ascites
- jaundice
- encephalopathy
- GI bleeding
- thrombocytopenia
Labs
Understand:
- AST/ALT patterns
- fibrosis assessment basics
- viral load concepts
Treatment
Modern hepatitis C treatment is highly effective.
You do not need specialist-level treatment knowledge, but know:
- cure rates are excellent
- adherence matters
- reinfection is possible
Hepatitis B
Know:
- transmission routes
- vaccination importance
- chronic infection basics
Important issue
Some medications used for HIV also affect hepatitis B.
Abrupt discontinuation can sometimes cause hepatitis flares.
3. TB Screening and Latent TB
Tuberculosis screening is extremely important in corrections because facilities are congregate environments.
Know:
- latent TB vs active TB
- screening tests
- symptoms of active TB
- isolation principles
Active TB symptoms
Know:
- chronic cough
- night sweats
- weight loss
- hemoptysis
- fevers
Important correctional principle
Never ignore chronic cough plus systemic symptoms.
Latent TB
Many patients have latent TB.
Know basics of:
- PPD
- IGRA testing
- chest X-ray follow-up
- treatment indications
High-risk groups
- homelessness
- HIV
- prior incarceration
- substance use
- immigrants from endemic areas
4. Skin Infections and MRSA
One of the most common infectious disease problems in corrections.
Why common?
- close living quarters
- hygiene limitations
- skin trauma
- substance use
- shaving injuries
- scratching/picking
Common infections
You will frequently see:
- abscesses
- folliculitis
- cellulitis
- MRSA
- fungal infections
MRSA
Know:
- purulent skin infections
- drainage principles
- when antibiotics are needed
Common antibiotics
Know basics of:
- TMP-SMX
- doxycycline
- clindamycin
Important principle
Drainage is often more important than antibiotics for abscesses.
Red flags
Escalate for:
- rapidly spreading infection
- crepitus
- severe pain out of proportion
- systemic toxicity
- immunocompromised patients
Think about:
- necrotizing infection
- bacteremia
5. Sexually Transmitted Infections (STIs)
Very high prevalence in correctional populations.
Especially among women entering correctional systems.
Know:
- gonorrhea
- chlamydia
- syphilis
- herpes
- trichomonas
- HPV basics
- PID basics
Common correctional themes
Many patients:
- had little preventive care
- were never screened
- have prior trauma histories
- have substance use overlap
PID (Pelvic Inflammatory Disease)
You should recognize:
- pelvic pain
- cervical motion tenderness
- fever
- discharge
Untreated PID can lead to infertility and chronic pain.
Syphilis
Know basics of:
- primary lesion
- secondary rash
- latent disease
- neurosyphilis warning signs
Rates have risen substantially in many regions.
Herpes
Very common.
Patients may present with:
- painful ulcers
- recurrent outbreaks
Know basics of:
- acyclovir
- valacyclovir
HIV/STI overlap
STIs increase HIV transmission risk.
Always think broadly about sexual health risk factors.
6. Endocarditis Risk Factors
You may not diagnose endocarditis often, but you absolutely must recognize risk factors and warning signs.
Major risk factors
- IV drug use
- indwelling lines
- prosthetic valves
- prior endocarditis
Symptoms
Know:
- fever
- murmur
- fatigue
- embolic symptoms
- unexplained bacteremia
Important correctional point
Do not dismiss fever in patients with IV drug use history.
High-risk situations
Think about endocarditis in:
- fever + IV drug use
- recurrent skin infections
- septic emboli symptoms
- unexplained stroke
7. Cellulitis
Very common.
Risk factors
- edema
- obesity
- diabetes
- skin breakdown
- injection drug use
Evaluation
Know how to assess:
- redness
- warmth
- fluctuance
- lymphangitis
- systemic toxicity
Key distinction
Differentiate:
- cellulitis
- abscess
- DVT
- venous stasis
- necrotizing infection
Antibiotics
Know common outpatient choices:
- cephalexin
- doxycycline
- TMP-SMX
Escalate urgently for:
- systemic symptoms
- rapid spread
- severe pain
- crepitus
- hypotension
8. Scabies and Lice Outbreaks
Very important in congregate settings.
Scabies
Symptoms:
- intense itching
- worse at night
- finger webs
- waistline
- groin involvement
Correctional importance
Scabies outbreaks can spread rapidly through facilities.
Treatment
Know basics of:
- permethrin
- environmental cleaning
- contact precautions
Lice
Also common in patients with:
- unstable housing
- poor hygiene access
Know:
- treatment basics
- cleaning protocols
9. Vaccination Catch-Up
Vaccination rates are often poor before incarceration.
Correctional medicine is a major opportunity for preventive infectious disease care.
Important vaccines
Know:
- hepatitis A
- hepatitis B
- influenza
- COVID
- Tdap
- pneumococcal vaccines
- HPV basics
High-yield correctional populations
Especially important in:
- smokers
- chronic liver disease
- HIV
- diabetes
- homelessness
- substance use disorders
Women Entering Corrections: Key Infectious Disease Themes
Prior IV drug use
Raises risk for:
- hepatitis C
- HIV
- endocarditis
- skin infections
Unstable healthcare access
Many patients:
- lost follow-up
- never completed treatment
- never received vaccinations
Untreated hepatitis C
Extremely common.
Many women:
- know they have it
- were never treated
- fear stigma
High STI prevalence
Especially among patients with:
- trauma histories
- survival sex work
- substance use disorders
Use nonjudgmental communication.
What You Need to Know as a Correctional GP
You do not need advanced infectious disease specialization.
But you absolutely must know:
- how to recognize dangerous infections
- when isolation is needed
- outbreak basics
- common antibiotics
- screening protocols
- vaccination catch-up
- when urgent transfer is necessary
Infectious Disease Emergencies You Cannot Miss
Escalate urgently for:
- sepsis
- meningitis
- necrotizing infection
- active TB concern
- severe pneumonia
- endocarditis suspicion
- altered mental status
- rapidly spreading cellulitis
- hypoxia
- severe dehydration
The Core Correctional Infectious Disease Mindset
The best correctional physicians:
- think about public health
- recognize outbreaks early
- avoid dismissing symptoms
- understand addiction overlap
- document carefully
- use universal precautions consistently
- treat patients without stigma
A huge amount of correctional infectious disease care involves identifying conditions that were ignored, untreated, or interrupted long before incarceration.
