While inmate comfort isn’t any
jail’s mission, those who find themselves behind bars in
Hillsborough County, Florida, can rest easier knowing that their
health care needs are well looked after. A pod-based “primary
nurse” model and comprehensive medical discharge planning are
just a few of the forward-thinking approaches the jail has taken
to ensure that it meets the health needs of its inmates.
Building on the direct supervision style of
security, the health services department has stationed an LPN in
each of the facilities’ housing pods. “The concept is that she
is a primary nurse for those inmates,” says medical director
Beth Weaver, DO, MPH, who has worked at the jail since November
2005. “She gets to know the inmates and their needs, and is
there to help if they have an urgent problem or want to request
sick call.” A nurse is on-site 16 hours per day (in two
eight-hour shifts), overseeing care for 72 inmates from a
private office. She has a medication cart and wound care
supplies, and monitors conditions such as hypertension and
diabetes.
This approach is in keeping with the jail
administrators’ philosophy of bringing care to the inmate
whenever possible. Services given in the pods include physical
assessments, which are done using equipment stored in a cart
that’s wheeled from site to site; HIV and syphilis testing
conducted by county health department employees; psychiatric
visits in a private room; physical therapy; and discharge
planning assessments (more about that below).
Doing this takes quite a bit of planning,
Weaver notes, but says it’s appropriate for security reasons.
Plus, everybody seems to like it. “For the inmates, it’s like a
house call. The clinicians like it because they don’t have to
wait around in a medical clinic if the inmates are delayed in
transport.” There was some concern that the LPNs might feel
isolated, but they often have to visit other areas of the jail
and interact with colleagues so it hasn’t been a problem, says
Weaver. “After they get used to it, they usually like it because
they feel like they are part of something bigger.”
Award-Winning Program
While national recidivism studies generally look at
releasees from prisons, not jails, it doesn’t take a
statistician to know that the same old faces keep showing up in
jail. The reasons are complex and hard to overcome, but the
Hillsborough County jail has had measurable success in reducing
recidivism through medical discharge planning.
Discharge planning is increasingly
understood to be an important element of correctional health
services and was added as a distinct standard in the 2003
editions of the NCCHC Standards for Health Services. The
Hillsborough County program not only meets the standard but also
goes several steps further.
In early 2006, the jail decided to
revitalize its medical discharge planning efforts by making that
task the sole role of a single, full-time staff member. When
Nazim Hamid, PhD, wandered into a job fair, the human resources
representative knew she found the perfect candidate. Despite his
lack of experience in corrections, or even in discharge
planning, he possessed the right combination of skills and
traits that would be needed to build and run the program.
Just 15 months later, the jail’s medical
discharge program had made such great strides in its approach to
planning for inmates’ medical and mental health needs upon
release that it was named 2007 Program of the Year by NCCHC.
With a diverse background that includes a
Caribbean upbringing, a doctoral degree in agronomy and a long
stint in horticultural administration in New York City, Hamid
segued into health care by doing plant therapy in nursing homes
and rehabilitation facilities. He worked with mental health and
substance abuse patients in New York hospitals and earned a
degree in health services management. Along the way he served as
a captain in the U.S. Army Reserve.
At the Hillsborough County jail, Hamid’s
enthusiasm for learning, military discipline, management
experience and passion for nurturing proved invaluable. He
educated himself about the world of corrections and analyzed
operations and populations in his own facility. He researched
discharge planning models but, finding little he could apply
directly, he customized a model for his facility and patients.
He forged relationships with contacts throughout the county, and
he set up a way to track and measure outcomes.
After an intense month of preparation, he
was ready to meet with inmates. That part was easy: “I enjoy
helping people, and here I know I am doing a service to people
who truly need it,” says Hamid.
Medical Planning and More
The primary charge for the program was to help patients with
chronic medical and mental health conditions continue their care
in the community. (Inmates with certain mental health needs go
through a different process.)
Step one is to identify those inmates. Most
referrals come from health or program staff, but word-of-mouth
among inmates also prompts some to seek help. Hamid interviews
them to discover the probable gaps in care after release. Often
that means determining if they qualify for assistance from
county or federal health programs and filling out applications
before they are discharged. Other times he directs them to
community clinics.
Based on this discussion and case review,
he creates a plan for each inmate and makes connections with
outside agencies as necessary. He also is very generous with
coaching and encouragement. Each inmate leaves with transition
paperwork, plus a three-day supply of medications (seven days
for psychiatric meds) and a 30-day prescription, along with a
list of pharmacies. Because a state program provides drugs for
HIV and syphilis, Weaver manages securing those drugs for
patients who need them.
These tasks are the essentials of medical
discharge planning, but for Hamid that’s only the beginning.
“Almost 80% of our inmates are homeless and have nowhere to go;
they don’t know what help is available,” he says.
So he also provides guidance with the
myriad details that help to ensure a successful transition into
the community, such as housing, employment, education,
transportation and community, which he defines as including
family members and religious groups.
Hamid gets help from co-workers, the county
and local health agencies, and others, but much of his work is a
one-man effort. His caseload is heavy but he takes it in stride.
“If somebody needs help, I cannot turn them away.”
His efforts are paying off, says Weaver.
“We now have data that show a significant portion of people who
participate in that planning are not coming back to jail.” Hamid
calculated the following recidivism statistics after the first
eight months (May-December, 2006) of the program’s operation.
• Average rate for all inmates (one-year
period): 27%
• Inmates who received discharge planning: 23.1% (95 of 410)
• Inmates known to have visited the local health center for
follow-up: 16.3% (16 of 98)
More current data are even more impressive:
a cumulative annual recidivism rate of 15.3% among inmates who
received discharge planning.
Harder to quantify but enormously
important, at least to Hamid, are the success stories he learns
about. “Sometimes I sound like an evangelist, but I am convinced
that we are saving lives.”
—
About the author: Jaime Shimkus is NCCHC’s editor. To contact her, e-mail jaimeshimkus@ncchc.org.
[This article first appeared
in the Winter 2008 issue of CorrectCare.]