Michelle didn't deserve this!
I’m going to
share a sad story with you today. It
comes from my friend Linda, who is a prisoner here in the State of
Michigan. Normally, before we publish
stories like this, we tweak them, brush them up, rearrange them, to make them
look and sound nice. Not so this
time. I’m going to let the narrative
take its erratic path so that you can actually hear the sobbing hiccups, feel
the dampness of the tears.
Linda tells
the story of a fellow prisoner named Michelle, who is no longer with us.
I have been
in this unit since April 11. Michelle went to diabetic lines every morning and
evening. I never knew Michelle as a healthy woman. For these few months, every time
a health care professional walked through the waiting room, Michelle asked, “please
help me, when am I going to be seen, I hurt so much.” I worked in the medical
profession for several years, and in that time I have never seen edema as bad
as hers. Her legs were not only swollen, but as her leg rested against the side
of her wheelchair on the way to diabetic lines, the compressed, indentation
remained through her entire wait. She had bed sores on her body that she could
not reach and needed another inmate’s assistance to apply ointment to them. But
what the tragedy of this is, she was yelled at by officers, ignored by nurses
and doctors and called a faker. One particular officer, on more than one occasion,
yelled at her, yelled loud enough to be heard 5 rooms away through closed
doors, that she was faking and could not use the wheelchair in the unit.
"Get out of that chair, you’re faking and going to really need it if you
don't get up and start walking!" Michelle pleaded, “I can’t, I hurt, you
don’t understand how bad I hurt.” One day she fell in the bathroom, nurses came
in to the unit and the unit officer told them she didn't need a gurney, that
she was only faking it.
This week
Michelle died. Do you know why Michelle
died? Her cancer of the stomach
returned, aggressively, and took her without any time left to treat or even
give her the humanity of care and kindness that she deserved. She was ridiculed
and left to suffer and ignored until the new PC came into the unit and sent her
to the infirmary. She finally got sent to the hospital, but it was too late.
She had no time left.
My immediate
response: I should call a doctor. (I did.)
I should call a lawyer. (I did.)
I should tip off the media. (I did.)
But there’s only so much that Matt and I can do. We continue to hear stories about
mistreatment of women by the State of Michigan, and yet nothing seems to get
done.
So here’s my
suggestion this time: Share the
story. Share it with any Michigan
taxpayer you know. Share it with your
State Senator and your State Representative.
Complain loudly. Make your voice
heard.
I have no
idea as to the nature of Michelle’s crime, if there really was one. I have no idea whether she was a problem
patient. I do know this: She was someone’s daughter; she was created
in the image of God; and, she did nothing to deserve this kind of treatment.
The good
news is that Michelle is in a better place now, where there’s no pain, and no
more tears are being shed.
The bad news
is that we’re still weeping here.
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