I've found several articles in English about similar cases of poor sanitation in prisons around the world, where mothers and babies face deficient hygiene, lack of soap, poor sanitation, and neonatal health risks, analogous to the use of bleach in El Salvador.
Sub-Saharan Africa
In prisons in countries like Cameroon, Chad, Côte d'Ivoire, and Zimbabwe, mothers and children live in unsanitary conditions with poor sanitation, overflowing shared bucket toilets, and lack of soap or detergents, causing diarrhea and respiratory illnesses in infants.
A study details that over half of 27 countries report inadequate hygiene, with children exposed to gastrointestinal pathogens due to lack of clean water and dirty bathrooms.
Asia (Japan and Philippines)
In Japan, pregnant women are shackled during labor and postpartum, separated from newborns, and face inadequate care, including hygienic neglect abuses.
In the Philippines, detention centers lack prenatal equipment like ultrasounds, delaying care and exposing mothers and infants to health risks.
North America (US)
In US jails, such as in Texas and migrant detention centers, children lack soap, toothpaste, or showers from the border, with constant stench and overcrowding limiting toilet access.
Reports highlight black mold, clogged toilets, and lack of basic hygiene, violating constitutional rights.
South America (Brazil)
In Brazil, mothers in prisons struggle for diapers, sanitary pads, and soap, with endemic tuberculosis and scabies, plus inadequate nutrition for pregnant women.
Europe (UK)
In UK prisons, lack of maternity facilities causes premature births in cells (11% of cases 2016-2019) and missed appointments due to hospital access barriers.
These cases highlight global prison hygiene issues for mothers and infants. For more details: