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CorrectCare
Doc, I
Gotta Have That Pillow!
When Requests for ‘Comfort’ and Care Collide
By Michael Puerini, MD, CCHP, and Steven Shelton, MD, CCHP-A
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Notice to Inmates
There has been some confusion about our policy regarding
comfort items. Inmates often inquire about nonmedical
items such as pillows, mattresses, shoes, gloves and other
items that have nothing to do with good medical care. For
example, there is no medical research on who needs an
extra mattress or the possible benefit of an extra
mattress, a soft mattress or sleeping on the floor. This
simply is not proven medical care.
We in health services pride ourselves on the quality of
care we deliver to patients with serious medical needs.
The fact remains that we are here to help with your
serious medical needs, not to provide comfort items or
deal with custodial issues. We will not address issues
like mattresses and special pillows, shoes or any item
that is not clearly related to traditional medical
practice.
There are many possible arguments that can be made for
us to intervene in these comfort areas and in operations
like where you live or what bunk you have. We believe that
such arguments are overridden in almost all cases by our
mission to deliver excellent care for your serious medical
needs.
All time spent discussing comfort items and prison
operations takes from time that we should spend on
inmates’ serious medical issues. The only possible
reasonable exceptions are low bunk, stair restrictions and
legitimate work restrictions. (But don’t ask us to
intervene in job assignments. If you don’t like your job,
discuss that with the assignments officer.)
This is not a change in policy, it’s just an
explanation. We hope you will not ask us about custodial
issues and comfort items. If you do, don’t be surprised
when we explain the real role of health services in your
lives: to deliver the best quality of traditional medical
care for your serious medical needs.
Adapted with permission from the Oregon State Correctional
Institution. |
Many
correctional health care providers come from a private practice
environment in which we would do anything possible to improve
the comfort of our patients.
We are all,
first of all, caregivers, and good ones. While this caring is
positive and important, in corrections not everything that is
possible is practical.
This subject
came up yet again at a meeting of health services managers for
the Oregon Department of Corrections. Discussing the many
requests we receive for items and accommodations that clearly
are not related to medical necessity, we realized that there is
wide variability in practice regarding “comfort” orders.
Since this
subject resurfaces so often, we have written this article to
shed light on the issues and describe what we are doing about
it.
Job #1:
Health Care
A 1976 Supreme Court case—Estelle v. Gamble—established
the constitutional right of inmates to health care for their
“serious medical needs.” This is the legal basis for health
services in corrections.
With the
positive evolution of health services in correctional settings,
our time is consumed with delivering quality services to sick
patients. And as inmate populations grow older, we increasingly
are called upon to deal with very serious medical conditions.
In the mental
health arena, we have become the caregivers of some of the most
disturbed patients in our society. (For a vivid illustration,
see the PBS Frontline program “The
New Asylums,” which received the 2005 Anno Award of
Excellence in Communication.)
Given the
demands to deliver more and more “real” care, health staff time
is an important resource that we must ration carefully, in much
the same way that we ration our financial resources. We can no
longer afford the luxury of spending a lot of time discussing
nonmedical issues with patients.
Nevertheless,
our staff has long come under pressure—from inmates and often
from security staff—to intervene in areas of inmate comfort and
prison operation.
Physicians,
nurses and mental health staff are called upon to make bunk
assignments, define inmate work (by restricting people from jobs
they don’t like) and prescribe such elective items as
mattresses, pillows and shoes. We are asked to make medical
orders in the chart about how an inmate is shackled and even
about what procedure to order when an inmate is searched.
Dealing with
these requests can be touchy. After all, health care staff do
have the power to bend the rules for our patients. Unlike just
about everyone else, we can issue orders that result in a given
inmate being treated differently from the others. We must wield
this power carefully, always evaluating the medical evidence
that supports such orders.
Sometimes there
are objective reasons to bend the rules. Frequently, however,
there is no clear, evidence-based indication for a medical order
(“I am allergic to pork and can’t work in the kitchen”). Often
it is outside our area of expertise or responsibility (“I need
wide shoes.” “I need a soft pillow.”) Sometimes it simply seems
more expedient to do as we are asked (“This patient needs a
medical order for somebody to push his wheelchair”).
Consistent,
Evidence-Based Care
There are many reasons for us to work toward a more objective,
evidence-based approach to our work in correctional health care.
First, finding
objective evidence of bona fide serious medical problems helps
us to practice effective health care. For example, if a patient
says he has severe nasal allergies but has no mucosal congestion
or redness of the eyes, there is no objective evidence of
serious illness. If the patient says he has diabetes, we check a
hemoglobin A1C to confirm his claim.
At the Oregon
DOC, we also work within the concept of levels of therapeutic
care. We avoid prescribing elective and unnecessary items, even
if there is no or minimal treatment cost involved.
Frequently,
there is no objective, evidence-based intervention, in which
case we should perhaps decline to discuss the issue. For
example, no medical study supports the use of one kind of
mattress over another. When we discuss such unproven remedies,
we are taking this time from more important medical issues that
need our attention.
Sometimes it
seems easier to “give in,” but in the long term we will spend
more time and energy if we do so. For example, patients
sometimes argue for comfort items in a manipulative way, and by
giving in to the request, we are encouraging manipulation. The
Oregon Accountability Model says that our primary goal is to
“hold inmates accountable,” even while delivering care.
Also, by
practicing and prescribing in a consistent, objective,
evidence-based way, we educate our patients about reasonable
expectations in the health care arena. Such education is
essential for our patients, many of whom will parole in the near
future.
We also do
ourselves a favor. Many correctional health professionals are
frustrated with continual demands for nonmedical intervention.
This simply is not what we have studied and trained for. By
freeing ourselves up to practice our profession, we will
increase our job satisfaction and effectiveness.
Finally, we
minimize liability risk when we apply policies consistently
between and within our institutions. We all know how inmates
respond when they perceive that “the other guy got extra socks
from health services” and they didn’t.
Remedying
the Problem
Since 1994, the Oregon DOC has followed level-of-care policies
and procedures that address these issues. (See
ODOC Policy P-A-02.1.)
Since
caregivers may become worn down from nonmedical requests from
time to time, we suggest the following measures to reduce
inappropriate requests and to help health staff handle those
that do arise.
1. Provide
regular, consistent education to patients about the proper role
of health services in their lives, with emphasis on their
expectations about necessary medical care, comfort items and
levels of care (see “Notice” above).
Subsequent messages could be worded more simply.
2. Be
consistent with medical, nursing, dental and mental health
orders. Generally, we should default to declining to provide
comfort items or nonmedical orders unless there is a clear-cut
medical reason with a solid foundation in evidence-based
practice.
3. Consider
developing a “formulary” for nonmedical interventions. What form
this will take is open to an ongoing dialogue.
4. Develop a
review process for nonmedical interventions at every institution
and apply it consistently.
5. For all
medical interventions in this area, there should be
accountability for who made the order and why. Develop policy
that ensures that health staff are held accountable and that
provides for time-limited, written medical orders.
—
About the authors:
Michael
Puerini, MD, CCHP, is chief medical officer at OSCI, Salem, OR,
and Steven Shelton, MD, CCHP-A, is medical director at ODOC.
This article was written with assistance from Bridgett Whalen,
RN, health services manager at TRCI, Umatilla; Garth Gulick, MD,
staff physician at SRCI, Ontario; and Daryl Ruthven, MD, ODOC
chief psychiatrist.
[This article first appeared in the
Winter 2006 issue of CorrectCare.]
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