Pubdate: Fri, 22 Feb 2008 Source: Capital Times, The (WI) Contact: 2008 The Capital Times Website: http://www.madison.com/tct/ Details: http://www.mapinc.org/media/73 Authors: Mike Miller and Steven Elbow MAN DIES IN PRISON UNDER CARE OF 'CONDESCENDING' DOCTOR An attorney says the death of an inmate at the state prison system's infirmary was hastened by inadequate medical care by a doctor whose practices have been questioned in the past. Michael J. Dobson, 57, of Madison, died Wednesday at the Waupun Memorial Hospital, where he was taken the previous week because of his grave condition at the Dodge Correctional Institution infirmary. Dobson died as Dane County Circuit Judge James Martin was signing documents ordering his release so his family could take him to a hospice center for the last days of his life. Madison attorney Mark Eisenberg said Dobson, who suffered from severe lung and liver problems, received inadequate care at the Dodge Correctional infirmary in Waupun, including the removal of an oxygen respirator, needed for his dangerously low oxygen levels. Eisenberg, who represented Dobson in the criminal case that resulted in his prison sentence, had been working for months to get better treatment for Dobson and had twice asked the court to rework the original sentencing to allow Dobson to leave prison. "They didn't kill him, but they hastened his death," Eisenberg said Thursday of prison health staff, particularly Dr. Thomas Williams, who was the subject of a lengthy investigation last year by The Capital Times that uncovered numerous problems with medical treatment for prisoners. "He is condescending, and he just doesn't care," Eisenberg said of the doctor. Williams is the primary physician for the Dodge Correctional Institution infirmary, where inmates are sent when their medical problems become too severe to be handled in a normal prison setting. Department of Corrections spokesman John Dipko said in an e-mail today that "Mr. Dobson's death will be reviewed internally in the same manner as any death in our system is reviewed, which is through the mortality review process. Also, outside law enforcement and the medical examiner were notified, which is standard practice. At this stage, we have no information to indicate DOC staff acted inappropriately." Health problems Dobson, a glazier until his health forced him to go on disability, was charged in late 2005 with selling cocaine and eventually entered a no contest plea. He was sentenced on May 1, 2007, to 15 months in prison, to be followed by four years of extended supervision. At that time, Dobson already was having health problems. He was using a portable liquid oxygen unit because of a chronic shortage of oxygen in his blood, which caused scarring in his lungs, according to court records. In light of that, when Judge Martin sentenced Dobson to prison, he gave him two weeks before he had to report so that Dobson, Eisenberg and the prison system could plan for his health care. But Dobson's battle over health problems in prison began as soon as he arrived, according to an affidavit filed with the court by Eisenberg. The lawyer said prison officials took away Dobson's portable oxygen unit and instead installed a stationary condensed air unit in Dobson's cell with a 7-foot hose on it. That meant Dobson was essentially confined to his cell and bed and was not receiving the potent form of oxygen he needed, Eisenberg said. Eisenberg visited Dobson in prison about two weeks later and said Dobson "was weak, barely able to walk and had extreme difficulty breathing." Although staff had met on Dobson's case and determined he could be sent to a medium-security facility, he remained at Dodge because of his medical condition, Eisenberg said. Eisenberg complained to Dr. Scott Hoftiezer, who is Williams' boss, about the lack of a portable liquid oxygen supply. Hoftiezer saw Dobson, but the prison did not replace the stationary condensed air unit, Eisenberg said. Judge orders exam In an affidavit filed with a motion to reduce the prison sentence in July, Eisenberg wrote that he was "very concerned that based on the lack of medical attention Mr. Dobson has received in this matter, his health will deteriorate and he will die." While Martin declined to alter Dobson's prison term at that point, he did order the prison system to have him taken to University of Wisconsin Hospital for a thorough pulmonary examination "within a reasonable time," court records show. While that order was made on Aug. 14, it was not until Nov. 9 that Dobson was taken for that examination. UW physician Dr. Ellie Golestanian did the pulmonary examination and said Dobson suffered from chronic hypoxemia, an abnormally low oxygen concentration in the body. "His requirements for oxygen are substantial, and I do recommend that he be kept in a medical unit where oxygen supplementation via a non-rebreather mask can be provided," she wrote in her report. Although that report was written after her Nov. 9 examination, the prison system still did not get a liquid oxygen system for Dobson until December. Golestanian said she was not sure, given Dobson's lengthy history of smoking tobacco and snorting cocaine, if he would be a lung transplant candidate. She said that would be the only cure for his breathing problem. She also recommended that Dobson be given a liver examination. Eisenberg said Golestanian offered to set up such an examination at the hospital on the day she saw Dobson and also offered to get him a portable liquid oxygen system, but he said that was not done because prison guards wanted to return Dobson to prison right away. Despite Golestanian's recommendation for an additional examination of Dobson's liver, nothing was done until Martin issued another order on Jan. 4 for the liver examination. Martin's order came after a brief hearing in which Williams responded by phone. When Eisenberg told Williams he wanted the doctor to appear at the hearing, Williams sent him a one-line e-mail saying "I am not available." Eisenberg then subpoenaed Williams, and the doctor testified by telephone. After the hearing, Martin ordered that a liver examination be done on Dobson and emphasized in his order, using capital letters, "THIS CONSULTATION SHALL BE DONE AS SOON AS POSSIBLE." Despite that admonition, the exam was scheduled for Feb. 14, but by then Dobson had deteriorated so badly that it was decided he couldn't be sent from the infirmary to UW Hospital for the work-up. Martin, at Eisenberg's request, ordered Dobson's release from prison Wednesday, but by then he was dead. Previous trouble In a series of articles last July, The Capital Times cited numerous inmates, nurses and outside observers who said Williams routinely denied inmates needed medical care and medications and was condescending, rude and negligent. Many of their claims were backed up by medical records obtained by The Capital Times. Corrections officials defended his medical practices, but admitted he was counseled about his interactions with patients. Lawyer Todd Winstrom of Disability Rights Wisconsin, which is authorized by the state to advocate for people with disabilities, filed a complaint in July with the state Medical Board seeking action on Williams' license. The complaint was on behalf of one patient who suffered from an infected arm that went untreated for weeks until UW physicians, who were seeing the patient on another matter, discovered the wound. The UW physicians surgically cleaned the wound and put the patient, who has since died, on antibiotics. The status of that complaint was not immediately available Friday. Williams, who has been with the Department of Corrections since 2004, was disciplined by the Medical Board for providing inadequate care to two patients in the 1980s; one of the patients died. - --- MAP posted-by: Derek