Mentally ill inmates suffer
The inmate was mumbling. Shaking. Clearly in a psychotic state and whispering about a black hole.
The
black hole had already demanded, and received, his blood once, the
inmate told Dr. Pablo Stewart, a psychiatrist who visited Pontiac
Correctional Center last fall to determine whether the state was abiding
by a settlement agreement crafted to improve care for mentally ill
inmates. Now, the inmate told Stewart, the hole wanted more blood.
Stewart says that he turned from court-appointed monitor to clinician,
attempting convince the inmate that the black hole wasn’t real.
After
a few minutes, the inmate was returned to his segregation cell, where
mentally ill inmates who misbehave spend as many as 23 hours a day
locked up alone, Stewart testified this week in U.S. District Court in
Peoria. It could be worse. Inmates deemed seriously suicidal are sent to
crisis cells where they are restrained to beds without mattresses, legs
spread and shackled down, Stewart testified, their arms shackled and
extended above their heads, as if stretched out on medieval torture
racks.
“You get cramps
and charley horses,” said Corrie Singleton, a Pontiac inmate who
testified that he’s been so restrained seven or eight times for as long
as 72 hours at a stretch since September. Once every two hours, guards
loosen restraints, one limb at time, for eight minutes, Singleton said.
He always picks his left arm. His right arm, Singleton explained, is
dislocated, and so it is strapped down near his side instead of pinned
down over his head, next to his left arm.
Testifying
telephonically and fresh from a straitjacket, Singleton said Tuesday
that he has been on suicide watch for six days after swallowing
batteries. He had been allowed a shower and a chance to brush his teeth
just once during that time, he testified in a flat voice, blinking
little as he stared into the camera. He said he last had a one-on-one
session with a mental health counselor in September.
“Are you on medication?” asked U.S.
District Court Judge Michael Mimh.
“Yes, your honor,” answered Singleton, who is due for release in July.
“Do you know what medication you’re on?” the judge inquired.
“No,
your honor,” Singleton said. Singleton is the face of a mental health
disaster in Illinois prisons, according to attorneys for inmates who’ve
been battling in court since 2007, attempting to force improvements.
Inmates in 2015 agreed to abandon a consent decree, hoping that Gov.
Bruce Rauner’s offer to settle the case without a decree would result in
faster change. That, according to the plaintiffs, hasn’t happened, and
so they’re back in court hoping for a judicial order to enforce the
settlement agreement.
An
inmate identified only as Tyler committed suicide in October after
unsuccessful attempts in April and July that resulted in no significant
change to his written treatment plans, which contained no mention that
he had attempted to take his own life, according to Stewart’s testimony
and court exhibits. Entire pages of the treatment plan form describing
Tyler’s condition and what should be done to help him were left blank,
and that’s typical, Stewart testified.
“This
isn’t an outlier,” testified the doctor, who told the court that
treatment plans routinely contain boilerplate language that doesn’t
change from inmate to inmate.
Approximately
900 of the 1,100 inmates in segregation in state prisons are mentally
ill, according to court records. Mental health professionals who check
on mentally ill inmates must shout at them through small openings in
cell doors that preclude inmates and those who are supposed to help them
from seeing each other, Stewart testified. It’s a vicious cycle, with
segregation cells making sick inmates even sicker, which prompts more
misbehavior, which results in more segregation time. They cut themselves
and smear their bodies with feces. The state last spring began giving
mentally ill inmates more time out of segregation cells by shackling
them to chairs in front of big-screen televisions that show movies,
which Stewart acknowledged is progress.
Backlogs of inmates whose visits with mental health professionals or
psychiatrists are overdue run into the thousands, Stewart testified. The
state has determined that 66 psychiatrists are needed to care for
inmates, but fewer than 35 are employed. Inmates get psychotropic drugs
without any follow-up to determine whether drugs are working or whether
side effects have developed, Stewart testified.
Dr.
Michael Dempsey, who left his post as director of psychiatry for the
Illinois Department of Corrections last spring, testified that Wexford
Health Sources, the company that holds the contract to provide health
care to inmates, has asserted that there have been no side effects from
psychotropic drugs given to inmates. That’s statistically impossible,
given the number of inmates who are receiving drugs, Dempsey said.
Either Wexford isn’t telling the truth, he testified, or assessments to
detect side effects aren’t being done properly.
Andrew
Ramage, a Wexford attorney who was in the gallery taking notes, said
that the company does not comment on pending litigation.
Side
effects can range from dangerous changes in blood chemistry to thyroid
and kidney disorders to involuntary body movements that can prove
irreversible, Dempsey and Stewart testified. Wexford psychiatrists are
evaluating inmates remotely with laptops that show patients from the
chest up, so it’s impossible to detect involuntary body movements caused
by psychotropics, Dempsey said.
Psychotropics can induce thirst, and Dempsey said he once
encountered an inmate with schizoaffective disorder who was drinking so
much water that his cell had become uninhabitable due to urine. The
patient’s chart showed that he’d been receiving twice the maximum
allowable dose of a psychotropic, with no explanation, even though the
drug had not improved his condition, Dempsey said.
“I
had to go to Wexford and say ‘Will someone look into this?’” Dempsey
testified. “Anyone should know what the maximum dose is.”
Wexford
employees also are giving doses of drugs too low to do any good if
patients refuse pills and so are injected by force, Dempsey said. In at
least one case, Dempsey said he found that Wexford employees had
substituted an injection of Ativan, a benzodiazepine, for a psychotropic
drug that is not in the same class of medication. Dempsey said that
Wexford officials told him that incorrect doses were given by injection
to give patients an “incentive” to take their pills. “That, to me, makes
no sense,” Dempsey testified.
Saying
that they are not prepared, attorneys for the Illinois Department of
Corrections have postponed their response to the push for court
intervention, and a hearing has been set for February. But Melvin
Hinton, a psychologist who is IDOC’s chief of mental health,
acknowledged serious issues, including his own lack of knowledge.
“Even
though you’re the head of mental health, you don’t know the budget for
mental health?” asked Harold Hirshman, an attorney for the plaintiffs.
“Correct,”
Hinton answered. “Do you think it’s important for you to do your job to
know how much is being spent?” Hirshman queried.
“Yes,” Hinton responded. “But you don’t have that information?” Hirshman asked.
“They don’t give me that information,” Hinton said.
Hinton
also acknowledged that the department doesn’t have a centralized
database to track treatment or the number of mentally ill inmates in
segregation or crisis cells. He also agreed that mentally ill inmates,
for fear of being overhead, are reluctant to talk about their problems
by shouting through openings in cell doors to mental health
professionals. While recruiting efforts to hire more psychiatrists
haven’t been successful, Hinton pointed out that a full-time
psychiatrist has been hired at Galesburg’s Hill Correctional Center.
“One person is going to solve the problem?” Hirshman inquired.
“No,” Hinton responded.
Contact Bruce Rushton at brushton@illinoistimes.com.