Morning Briefing
Summaries of health policy coverage from major news organizations
Trial Begins Over Basic Health Care Provisions For Arizona Prisoners
An incarcerated woman who testified at a trial Monday over the quality of health care in Arizona prisons tearfully recalled her frustration about the length of time it took to be diagnosed and treated for multiple sclerosis. Kendall Johnson detailed her repeated attempts to get help for what started as numbness in her feet and legs in 2017 and was diagnosed as multiple sclerosis in 2020. (Billeaud, 11/2)
In 2017, Walter Jordan wrote a memo to a federal judge from the Arizona State Prison Complex in Florence. 鈥淣otice of Impending Death,鈥 it said in a shaky hand. Jordan told the judge that Arizona corrections officials and Corizon Health, the state prison system鈥檚 private health care contractor at that time, delayed treating his cancer for so long that he would be 鈥渓ucky to be alive for 30 days.鈥 Jordan, 67, had a common form of skin cancer that is rarely life-threatening if caught early, but said he experienced memory loss and intense pain from botched care. Other men in his unit were also denied treatment, he wrote, 鈥渁ll falling, yelling, screaming of pain.鈥 Jordan was dead eight days later. (Schwartzapfel and Jenkins, 10/31)
The landmark trial Jensen v. Shinn began Monday in Phoenix, the latest chapter in an almost decade-long struggle to determine whether Arizona鈥檚 prisoners are getting the basic health care they are entitled to under the law. The federal trial pits Arizona against the people held in its prisons, who argue in a class-action lawsuit that the medical services they receive are so poor, they constitute cruel and unusual punishment. (Jenkins, 11/1)
In other news about health care in the prison system 鈥
At a Georgia state House of Representatives hearing on prison conditions in September, a corrections officer called in to testify, interrupting his shift to tell lawmakers how dire conditions had become. On a 鈥済ood day,鈥 he told lawmakers, he had maybe six or seven officers to supervise roughly 1,200 people. He said he had recently been assigned to look after 400 prisoners by himself. There weren鈥檛 enough nurses to provide medical care. 鈥淎ll the officers 鈥 absolutely despise working there,鈥 said the officer, who didn鈥檛 give his name for fear of retaliation. (Blakinger, Lartey, Schwartzapfel, Thompson and Sisak, 11/1)
One of the best places to intervene in the opioid epidemic is at the exit doors of jails and prisons. Aroostook County Jail is launching a pilot program to give a naloxone kit, naloxone training and opioid recovery resources to every person leaving incarceration. Sheriff Shawn Gillen and organizers at Aroostook Mental Health Center are targeting January 2022 to begin the project. The initiative is funded by a $1 million federal grant聽to combat substance use disorder stigma and prevent overdose deaths. The U.S. Health Resources and Services Administration awarded the grant to the AMHC last month. (Catlin, 11/1)