Pubdate: Sunday, 04 April 1999. Source: St. Louis Post-Dispatch (MO) Copyright: 1999 Post Dispatch Contact: http://www.stlnet.com/ Forum: http://www.stlnet.com/postnet/index.nsf/forums Authors: William Allen and Kim Bell NEWSPAPER INVESTIGATION FOUND CASES OF ALLEGED HEALTH-CARE NEGLIGENCE A five-month Post-Dispatch investigation published Sept. 27 found more than 20 cases nationwide in which prison and jail inmates died as a result of alleged negligence, indifference, understaffing, inadequate training or cost-cutting by private health care companies. Many of the cases involved St. Louis-based Correctional Medical Services Inc., the industry leader. Some experts said the cases represented the tip of the iceberg in a system of privatized health care behind bars that often neglects the medical profession's creed to keep "free from all intentional wrongdoing and harm." CMS, other companies and some public officials denied the critics' claim. In the special section, "Health Care Behind Bars: Death, Neglect and the Bottom Line," the newspaper also reported that: * Some companies put inmate health care in the hands of doctors who have been disciplined by state medical licensing boards or even committed crimes themselves. * In Missouri, secrecy, buck-passing and conflicts of interest define how state officials review prisoner deaths. For instance, the prison's medical director is the first to review a death, even if the director was the very doctor who treated the prisoner. The state has since hired a Texas doctor to review deaths. * A culture of skepticism permeates correctional health care nationwide. Inmates fake illness frequently, which can leave nurses and doctors blind to real sickness. * Distant administrators intervene in the practice of medicine by doctors, often second-guessing their decisions on economic grounds. The extra steps can delay treatment or approval for medication. * The National Commission on Correctional Health Care, which sets standards and accredits prison and jail health care operations, does not serve as the watchdog that private companies claim. * Medical records are sometimes altered. Records have been changed to falsely indicate that doctors gave medical orders when in fact a nurse did. * Whistle-blowers in four states say the company has routinely denied or delayed expensive medical care. NOTE: The Sept. 27 special section is available on the World Wide Web at http://special.postnet.com/prisoncare/. - --- MAP posted-by: Derek Rea