Guest guest Posted September 26, 2006 Report Share Posted September 26, 2006 Wonderful post! What goes along with this is that prison medicine is terrible, so inmates are released sick and infectious. 2 items: Prison Clinics Called Dirty, Deadly A report by court- appointed monitors says healthcare at San Quentin is so bad it is dangerous, sometimes fatal, to inmates. By Jordan Rau, Times Staff Writer SACRAMENTO — Despite a court order to improve medical care for inmates, San Quentin State Prison's health facilities and treatment practices are so harrowingly bad that many sick prisoners should not be taken there at all, independent examiners have concluded. The court-appointed experts inspected the medical records of 10 inmates who died over the last few years in California's oldest and best known prison and concluded that in each case, the treatment " showed serious problems " and " most deaths were preventable. " Doctors and nurses misdiagnosed illnesses, gave patients the wrong medications, neglected them for months and even years or delayed sending them to emergency rooms until they were fatally ill, the experts discovered. The examiners watched a dentist examine inmate after inmate while wearing the same pair of gloves. Records were in such disarray that doctors reported that they could not find medical files for at least 30% of the inmates they examined. Based on visits to the prison earlier this year, the experts' April 8 report documented filthy clinics and patient housing. Dental examinations are done in a place without light or water; inmates are initially evaluated in a room without a sink for washing hands; nurses until recently used a broom closet as an examination room; and wheelchair-bound patients cannot roll into the hospital cells on their own because the doors are too narrow. " We found a facility so old, antiquated, dirty, poorly staffed, poorly maintained, with inadequate medical space and equipment and overcrowded that it is our opinion that it is dangerous to house people there with certain medical conditions and also dangerous to use this facility as an intake facility, " the experts wrote. The examiners found less dreadful but nonetheless extensive shortcomings with the medical care at Salinas Valley State Prison and the California State Prison at Sacramento, in Folsom. Although they found improvements, the visits uncovered some of the same management problems that plague San Quentin, including a lack of basic medical equipment, dirty facilities and a culture of indifference among some senior medical staff. Taken together, the site reports raise major questions about California's compliance with the settlement of a lawsuit charging that inmate medical care was so poor it amounted to cruel and unusual punishment. The case was settled in 2002 and is being overseen by U.S. District Judge Thelton in San Francisco, who appointed the monitors. Under the terms of the settlement, the state's prisons should already be making improvements, and must complete them by 2008. , who last year threatened to appoint a receiver to take over the entire state Department of Corrections, discussed the reports Wednesday in Sacramento with the medical experts, state prisons commissioner Roderick Hickman and, separately, state Sen. Gloria Romero (D-Los Angeles), chairwoman of a Senate panel investigating state prisons. Todd Slosek, a corrections spokesman, said department officials will be prepared to discuss the problems at a hearing Romero has set for today on the broader topic of prison healthcare costs. " We're currently working with the courts to address the issues raised by the experts, " he said, adding that the department has developed a remedial plan for the deficiencies found at San Quentin. Romero said the reports make her question whether the prison system is capable of reforming itself. She noted that while $1 billion of the $7-billion annual prison budget is spent on healthcare, the reports suggest that much of this money is squandered. " What these reports reflect is there has been a culture of negligence by the bureaucracies across the various administrations in terms of addressing the most basic healthcare needs of inmates, " Romero said. The monitors — who include doctors and nurses with experience in prison healthcare — raised the same concerns about the overcrowded San Quentin prison, which is supposed to house no more than 3,317 inmates but has a population hovering around 6,000. They noted the incredibly low expectations of the staff, who would refer to " the San Quentin way " and say that they were " making do with the hand we've been dealt " when discussing the prison's inferior clinics and equipment. The experts also noted that the prison only emerged within the last decade from a previous federal order to improve medical care. " The system of organizational structure within the [California Department of Corrections] that permitted this facility to deteriorate over the past 10 years to the state described in this report must be addressed as well, " they wrote. " These problems have not occurred overnight. " Among the problems at San Quentin identified by the examiners: • Three patients who later died had been seen by the same doctor, who the experts said failed to properly treat patients with clear signs of extreme illness and did not refer them for emergency care " until their conditions had deteriorated to the point where their deaths were inevitable. " The doctor, who was not named in the report, was placed on administrative leave after the third death. • One patient identified as having " extremely high blood pressure " was " basically neglected for over a year and a half " until he died. • Another patient who died from renal failure was not correctly diagnosed for " an extended period " and then was not given dialysis. He was, however, given medicines that were not safe for him. • A diabetic inmate with a foot problem was housed in the mental health unit because there were no empty beds in the medical unit. There, his shoes were taken away, as is customarily done with psychotic and suicidal patients, even though his bare foot was then made more vulnerable to damage. The experts found less serious but still inadequate conditions at Salinas. Their report said the Corrections Department had increased doctors' hours to reduce the backlog of untreated inmates. Still, the experts concluded that high nurse and medical assistant turnover and vacancies undermined prompt examinations, with appointments often rescheduled and new patients not being referred to physicians. " The fact that healthcare staff has difficulty obtaining basic medical supplies for clinic operations is completely unacceptable, and helps explain staff exasperation and frequent turnover, " the experts wrote. http://www.latimes.com/news//la-me- prisons14apr14,1,6067346.story?coll=la-newsaol-headlines Health-Care Contractor at Va. Prisons Under Fire Other States Question Company's Services By Gelineau, Associated Press Thursday, May 18, 2006; VA04 A prison health-care company that has come under fire nationally for what some call shoddy medical care is under contract with the Virginia Department of Corrections and is stirring similar complaints here. Prison Health Services, the largest U.S. provider of health care to inmates, has been the target of lawsuits and allegations of poor medical care and neglect in other states. The company provides care to about one-third of Virginia's 31,270 inmates. In 2004, 330 medical grievances were filed by inmates at Virginia prisons using the Brentwood, Tenn., company, Department of Corrections spokesman Larry Traylor said. The department does not track how many of those grievances were deemed justified, he said. Inmates, however, in dozens of complaints shared with the Associated Press, say the care is so bad, some fear for their lives. " I know we're in prison, and I know things won't operate how they do out there -- but we are not sent here to die, " said Aimee Mootz, a former inmate medical aide in the infirmary at Fluvanna Correctional Center for Women. Prisoners regularly received substandard care at the infirmary -- including one seriously ill inmate who, Mootz said, was often left alone by medical staff to sleep in a pool of her own vomit. Prison Health Services and the Department of Corrections said they are unable to defend themselves against complaints because of patient confidentiality laws. A spokeswoman for the contractor would not disclose how many lawsuits have been brought against the company but said 96 percent of such cases are dismissed before trial. " It's worth noting that the practice of medicine is fraught with exposure to lawsuits, and a disproportionately high number of lawsuits originate in prisons and jails, " company spokeswoman Morgenstern wrote in an e-mailed response to questions. " We have an excellent team of medical professionals in Virginia, and they work hard every day to provide quality medical care. " Prison Health Services provides medical care at more than 310 jails and prisons in 37 states. It has been under contract with the Virginia Department of Corrections since 2001 and is used by eight of Virginia's 42 prisons, Traylor said. Between Feb. 1, 2004, and Jan. 31, 2005, the company was paid nearly $44 million, he said. The Department of Corrections' Office of Health Services is charged with monitoring health care for Virginia's inmates. Traylor provided AP with a copy of a 2004 internal audit report that analyzed how well the agency was monitoring two PHS-run infirmaries and a third run by the Department of Corrections. For the most part, the audit concluded, there were adequate controls over health service operations at all three medical units. The audit noted, however, that there were areas that needed improvement. They included oversight of drug distribution, documentation of medical procedures and inmate medical records and compliance with inmates' special dietary needs. The audit did not include a review of the quality of the inmates' health care. Traylor pointed out that while there were 330 medical grievances filed against the contractor in 2004, hundreds of grievances were also filed that same year at Virginia prisons that do not use the company, indicating it is not a company-specific issue. Many inmates, he said, arrive at prison with multiple medical conditions they have long neglected and often expect immediate cures. Still, other states have encountered problems with Prison Health Services: · In Alabama, a court-ordered monitor of health care at the state's women's prison found that Prison Health Services made mistakes in prescribing drugs and gave substandard care to 19 of 22 prisoners whose charts he reviewed. Women suffering from HIV, staph infections and other medical problems were consistently denied treatment, the monitor wrote in a report. · In South Carolina, a mentally ill inmate who committed suicide last year left a letter for his wife complaining that he hadn't received his medication for seven days. A special jury assembled by the county coroner later concluded the inmate died because of poor medical care from Prison Health Services. The Richland County Council terminated its contract with the company, with one member calling its service " unacceptable and inhumane. " · In New York state, the Commission of Correction began investigating Prison Health Services in 2000, soon after it entered into a contract with many New York prisons. The commission found the company cut corners in staffing by hiring physicians with questionable credentials and asking lower-paid medical providers to deliver care beyond their levels of expertise to save money, said Lawrence, the commission's director of operations. New York continues to use the company in some of its prisons. " The fundamental problem with PHS and the companies that are like it is that they're business corporations holding themselves out as medical care providers, " Lawrence said. " Physicians are not in charge, [and] profit imperatives and other business practices tend to trump medical autonomy. " Morgenstern, the Prison Health Services spokeswoman, said the company's physicians and medical staff have exclusive control over decisions requiring professional medical judgment. She noted that under Virginia laws, the company does not need to be owned by physicians. Security concerns often overshadow the medical needs of inmates, said Cohen, former director of medical services at New York City's Rikers Island jail and now a national expert on correctional medical care. " It is my experience that for-profit health-care providers fail to respond to the routine conflicts between health care and security to the detriment of prisoners' health, " he said. Fluvanna inmate Marguerite Brown, 51, said the prison's nurses repeatedly ignored her pleas for help after she told them she'd been bleeding heavily from fibroid tumors. Brown said the nurses sent her away with vitamins for anemia. She said she eventually had to be rushed to the emergency room for a blood transfusion. " It's been rough -- real rough, " said Brown, serving a 13-year sentence on a variety of fraud and credit card theft charges. " If it weren't for God, I probably wouldn't know which way to go. " Inmates from every prison in Virginia that uses Prison Health Services have lodged medical complaints with the American Civil Liberties Union of Virginia, executive director Kent Willis said. The ACLU received 167 inmate health-care complaints in 2005, he said. In letters to the ACLU that were shared with AP, inmates from PHS-run facilities complained about a variety of problems, including chronic medication shortages and constant neglect of serious medical issues. " This place is killing me, " wrote Greensville Correctional Center inmate Larry AsBury, who said more than half the inmates he knows at Greensville are covered in rashes that go untreated. AsBury, who said he also has tuberculosis, wrote that he once waited months for a doctor to remove a cast from his wrist, finally becoming so frustrated he used a pair of fingernail clippers to cut it off. Willis acknowledged that garnering public sympathy for inmates is tough. " You combine that with the fact that the whole process is so isolated, [and] it's difficult for information critical of the services to surface, " Willis said. http://www.washingtonpost.com/wp- dyn/content/article/2006/05/17/AR2006051700714.html Quote Link to comment Share on other sites More sharing options...
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