The Ministry of Health in Ecuador has confirmed 1,115 tuberculosis cases across 12 prisons throughout the country. Litoral Penitentiary in Guayaquil houses 565 of these cases, making it the epicenter of this escalating health emergency.
Authorities discovered five inmates dead in their cells at Litoral Penitentiary on March 7, 2025. Police reports suggested tuberculosis as the probable cause of death. Health officials deny these inmates appeared in their tuberculosis monitoring system despite the troubling discovery.
Prison conditions have severely deteriorated since President Daniel Noboa declared an internal armed conflict against drug gangs in January 2024. Military intervention has worsened already deplorable living environments according to inmate families and human rights organizations.
The disease now spreads through prisons in eleven provinces including Sucumbíos, Esmeraldas, Napo, Cotopaxi, and Pichincha. Health Minister Édgar Lama initially blamed prisoners for refusing treatment in public statements. The ministry later admitted only two inmates actually declined medication when pressed for accurate information.
Studies reveal tuberculosis rates in Ecuador‘s prisons reach 123 times higher than the general population. Treatment success hovers around 70%, with nearly 30% of cases failing due to inadequate follow-up or patient deaths.
Ecuador’s Prison Crisis
The Permanent Committee for Human Rights describes inmates as “cadaverous” with pale skin and visible malnutrition. Many live without proper hygiene, adequate nutrition, or consistent medical care in severely overcrowded conditions.
Risk factors for contracting tuberculosis include youth (ages 18-29), indigenous ethnicity, HIV infection, and longer incarceration periods. Testing should occur when inmates show symptoms like persistent cough, fever, weight loss, or night sweats.
Guayaquil’s government has demanded “immediate pronouncement and urgent measures” from national authorities. Officials warn this outbreak threatens not only prisoners but also guards, staff, visitors, and potentially the wider community.
This tuberculosis crisis represents one aspect of Ecuador’s broader prison emergency, where violence and healthcare neglect foster perfect conditions for disease transmission.