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CorrectCare
Legal Affairs
When
an Inmate Refuses Medical Care
By Robert P. Vogt, JD
Medical
professionals working in corrections understand that inmates
have a constitutional right to medical treatment for their
serious medical needs that is free of deliberate indifference.
While society does not expect that inmates will have
unqualified access to health care, the care that is provided
cannot be criminally reckless.
When an inmate refuses proffered medical
care, however, a problem of a different nature arises. The
inmate’s own health, the health of staff and other inmates,
and the security of the institution as a whole may be
affected. Correctional staff must be cautious to ensure that
the inmate’s refusal does not become a cause celebre leading
to facility security being undermined.
This article will discuss key points that
professionals should consider when confronting an inmate who
refuses to accept proffered medical care. While each case is
necessarily unique, there are some general ideas to keep in
mind.
The Right to Refuse Treatment
Some 15 years ago, the U.S. Supreme Court held in Cruzen
v. Missouri Department of Health that, as a rule, “A
competent person has a constitutional right to refuse unwanted
medical treatment.” Once an inmate becomes incarcerated,
however, that constitutional right is no longer absolute.
Instead, courts have recognized that an inmate’s right to
refuse medical care must be balanced against the state’s
interests in (1) protecting and preserving life, (2)
preventing suicide, (3) protecting the interests of third
parties and (4) maintaining prison security, order and
discipline. (See, e.g., Thor v. Superior Ct.)
As a practical matter, most inmate
refusals are inconsequential and result in no long-lasting or
significant health consequences. Refusing to take prescribed
medication, to submit to a physical examination or to tender a
health care request form are frequent events in any
correctional facility. It may be that an inmate is simply
attempting to manipulate the health care staff or to express
dissatisfaction with “the system,” which hardly warrants
any unusual attention.
The specific circumstance, however, may
cause an inmate’s refusal to accept medical care to run
contrary to one of the recognized interests of the state, and
if the refusal jeopardizes one of those interests, the
judiciary has shown no unwillingness to recognize the
superiority of the state’s interests.
Courts have, for example, authorized
correctional officials to force-feed inmates, to administer
psychotropic drugs without an inmate’s consent and to compel
inmates to undergo dialysis because, under the facts at issue,
the courts found that the state’s interests were superior to
the inmate’s constitutional right to refuse care.
There is no specific law regarding when a
state’s interest trumps an inmate’s constitutional right
to refuse medical care. Each case is fact-specific. The
inmate’s medical condition, the prognosis, the benefits and
burdens of the treatment, and the impact of the refusal on
other inmates (e.g., the “copycat” phenomenon) are all
factors that weigh upon this issue.
The bottom line, it appears, is that once
incarcerated, an inmate’s right to refuse medical care has
significant boundaries.
Responding to a Refusal of Care
Any refusal of health care by an inmate should be
addressed and properly documented. Proper documentation alerts
other health care providers to the inmate’s history and may
assist the professional in making future treatment decisions.
In addition, proper documentation helps the medical
professional recall isolated and seemingly insignificant
events months and years later.
There is no golden rule regarding how to
chart a refusal of medical care. Obviously, the specific care
that was refused and the inmate’s reason for the refusal
should be recorded, along with the date and time. The inmate
should be told of the possible consequences of the refusal,
and he should sign or initial the entry. The key is to include
enough information in the entry so that other professionals
are alerted and can react appropriately. It also will help the
medical professional to accurately recall the event later
relying solely on what was written.
Some correctional facilities use special
forms when an inmate refuses medical care. These forms provide
spaces for the information referred to above and often include
a space for the inmate to sign indicating that he is, in fact,
refusing the specific care at issue. In addition, if the
inmate refuses to sign the form, typically a space is provided
for a witness (i.e., another health care provider or a
correctional officer) to sign verifying that the inmate
refused the specific medical care but declined to sign the
form. These forms are excellent tools and reflect that the
inmate’s refusal of medical care is not being taken lightly.
Lastly, the inmate should be questioned
about why he is refusing the proffered medical care. Flushing
out the motivations can help the medical professional address
the inmate’s circumstance.
The decision on whether to alert a
physician or other medical professional about the refusal
depends on the inmate’s specific health care needs, the
medical care at issue and the health consequence, if any, of
the refusal.
Refusing Care and Civil Rights
One controversial byproduct of inmates’ rights to refuse
medical care arises when an inmate who refuses treatment then
turns around and claims that the medical professionals who
offered the declined treatment were deliberately indifferent
to the inmate’s serious medical needs. While at first blush
this might sound twisted, courts have repeatedly addressed
lawsuits filed by an inmate who complains that proper medical
care was not provided even though, the evidence shows, he
actually refused the care in question.
In ruling on these cases, the courts have
analyzed such claims in two different ways.
First, courts have recognized that an
inmate’s refusal of medical care indicates that the
underlying medical health problem cannot have been overly
serious. This approach simply reflects common sense—if the
health problem that the inmate allegedly suffers from were
serious, he would accept medical care to treat it. Since the
inmate refuses to accept the tendered medical care, the
underlying condition must not be serious. As the court
explained in Thomas v. Gish:
“The
fact that the plaintiff voluntarily declined treatment belies
any inference that his need was serious. That would be an
exotic theory of liability—a cousin to a prisoner’s
refusing medical treatment and then complaining that the
person had exhibited deliberate indifference to his medical
needs by failing to treat him—and one perhaps vulnerable to
a defense of crying wolf.”
Second, courts reject such claims finding
an absence of deliberate indifference by the defendants. These
courts recognize that a medical professional cannot be
criminally dangerous or reckless where the professional is
offering medical treatment that the inmate, for whatever
reason, simply refuses to accept.
The court in Grant v. O’Leary
held that, “The plaintiff cannot refuse treatment and food
and then complain that the defendants were deliberately
indifferent to his medical and nutritional needs.”
The court’s decision in Williams v.
Fishburn was even more blunt in refusing to accept such a
theory: “The plaintiff simply cannot create a constitutional
violation by refusing treatment.”
Conclusion
An
inmate’s refusal of medical care should be addressed
methodically. Attention should be paid to the refusal but,
because of the potential manipulation issues, the attention
should not, at least initially, be too extraordinary. Proper
documentation should be used and appropriate follow- up
assessments should be made. Because of the potential impact on
the inmate as well as others, medical professionals should
work closely with correctional staff to ensure that the
refusal does not mushroom into something overly serious.
— About the author: Robert P. Vogt, JD, is a partner with Weldon-Linne
& Vogt, a Chicago-based law firm that specializes in
defense of malpractice claims against health care
professionals. He is the immediate past chairman of the
Academy of Correctional Health Professionals. To contact him,
e-mail bvogt@wlv-online.com.
[This article first appeared in the
Summer 2005 issue of
CorrectCare.]
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