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Ala. Prisons Hit With Worst TB Outbreak In 5 Years

A federal lawsuit claims corruption and poor management are to blame for deaths and violence at St. Clair prison in Springville.
Alabama Department of Corrections
A federal lawsuit claims corruption and poor management are to blame for deaths and violence at St. Clair prison in Springville.

State health officials say Alabama's prison system is dealing with its worst outbreak of tuberculosis in five years.

Officials say they've diagnosed nine active cases of the infectious respiratory disease in state prisons this year.

Alabama prisons averaged fewer than five cases annually each year since 2009.

All but one of the cases this year occurred at the St. Clair Correctional Facility. The other occurred at Donaldson prison north of Birmingham.

The state director of tuberculosis control, Pam Barrett, says St. Clair prison isn't accepting new inmates because of the outbreak, and prisoners also aren't being transferred out.

Barrett hopes the outbreak is nearing an end.

Separately, health officials say they've identified active TB in a worker at the Mercedes-Benz plant in Vance and a student at Auburn University.

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