On rethinking Corizon: It's time!
A giant company is supposed to be taking care of the physical and mental
needs of Michigan inmates. We contend that it’s not happening properly.
Corizon Health is one of the largest for-profit medical providers for jails
and prisons in the United States. In 2016, the Tennessee-based Corizon signed a
5-year contract worth $715.7 million to provide both physical and mental health
services in Michigan prisons, according to the Detroit Free Press.
Here’s our story.
We are blessed to have a panel of excellent, dedicated physicians, representing a
variety of specialties, on the HFP advisory team. We call on them regularly to
help us answer a variety of questions from prisoners regarding symptoms, aches
and pains, injuries, treatment or lack thereof, and just general medical
care.
It seldom goes well, and invariably our doctors throw up their hands and
say, “In the free world, you or I would demand and receive proper treatment. It’s anybody’s guess what he or she will get behind bars.”
Corizon, which has proven time and again that the bottom line is most
important, is forever crowding the constitutional guarantees of the 8th
Amendment. Perhaps that’s why Matt Clarke reported, in Prison Legal News last
summer, Recent lawsuits against the
company…call into question the quality, and even the availability, of the
healthcare services it is supposed to provide. In addition to the
lawsuits, Clarke reported a trend of non-renewal of Corizon contracts in
Georgia, New Mexico, Indiana and New York.
I bring all of this to your attention after being contacted on a Sunday
morning by our medical director. A 52-year-old client has a rare genetic
disease. The diagnosis is unquestioned. Its treatment is not always terribly
effective, but it is always very
expensive. The inmate was promised treatment four months ago. Corizon admits it
has the medicine. Yet, as of today, no treatment. Maddening!
I wouldn’t bother writing about it if this were the exception. But it’s
the rule. It’s an uphill climb! It’s swimming upstream! It’s ridiculous!
To its credit, the Michigan Department of Corrections recently chose to
break a contract with an outside provider for food service after an abysmal
record of shortcomings. We think it’s time to take another look at Corizon. Based
on our experience, we can honestly state that Michigan prisoners are not
receiving adequate, appropriate medical care. The state doesn’t have the
right to allow that. Incarceration is the punishment. We may not add to it!
In his Prison Legal News report Matt Clark concluded: Perhaps, if Corizon focused on providing
competent and adequate care to prisoners, it would not be the subject of so
many lawsuits and at risk of losing its lucrative contracts.
Indeed.
Comments
against based on race, religion, ethnic background, sex, sexual orientation, gender identity, national origin, or disability." Too many prisoners do not receive proper treatment, receive delayed treatment, or are warehoused, waiting for death. Praying for changes to happen soon.