State is wasting money on death-row health careBy By David DelgadoJune 14, 2009 6:00 AMOn Sept. 18, 1995, Horacio Alberto Reyes-Camarena repeatedly stabbed two sisters, 18 and 30, whom he had met at a farm labor camp. The younger bled to death but the elder survived with 17 stab wounds to testify against him. In 1996, Reyes-Camarena was sentenced to Oregon's death row. He was placed under protection of the state.When it was discovered that his kidney was failing, the state covered the costs for his treatment, using $121,000 taxpayers' dollars per year to pay for dialysis. On top of that, his prison doctor stated that he deserved a kidney transplant, a procedure that would cost the state an additional $100,000, so that he would be able to stay healthy until the date of his execution.One would hope that this was a rare case, but unfortunately, Horacio is one of many death row inmates who receive premier treatment, cutting in front of thousands of others who are waiting for the same procedures. I think it is a little ironic that this murderer receive the transplant while 17 innocent people die every day in the U.S. waiting for this surgery, and the state of Oregon is paying for it. As an Oregonian who has watched my elementary school and 2 others close while our high school was forced to cut days, classes, and teachers due to lack of state funding, I find it not only irresponsible but negligible for the state to be paying for such outrageous procedures to keep alive a man who has been sentenced sentenced to die.Oregon is not alone in this excessive spending, however. Last year, California's overseer of the state's prison health care system petitioned for $8 billion over the next five years to build seven advanced medical facilities for inmates throughout the state. These facilities will provide premium health care for the inmates, many of whom have had horrible health problems due to drug use, lack of hygiene or gang violence previous to their admittance to the penitentiary.Is it right for the government to be spending billions of dollars providing better health care for those that have broken the rules then for the thousands of innocents who can't afford insurance? No!Now, understand me when I say that I am not suggesting that inmates should not be cared for or that they should be given bad treatment, but I find it outrageous when cases like Reyes-Camarena come up, where the government is setting a man who will soon be executed for his crimes as a higher priority than those who need the help most. Who are they to claim the authority to make that decision? The poor and uninsured need treatment just as much. The government should treat inmates, especially those on death row, with the same care and urgency as every other citizen that it declares to protect. That is why it is there, right?Now, some may argue that inmates on death row should be treated with such high levels of care because there is a chance they are not guilty. Of them I ask why the government should do this when it is not providing even basic care for thousands who are known to be innocent.The government should take this wasted spending and allocate it to the areas that could lower the number of inmates convicted in the first place: the public school system. It is proven that higher education directly relates to lower crime rates and incarceration. With Oregon's education system ranked last among the 50 states in many areas, and being one of only five states to receive a "D" overall grade according to last year's report by Education Week's Quality Counts, it is an understatement to say that much needs to be done.It is not acceptable that criminals who have committed crimes worthy of the death penalty receive transplants, complex surgeries and advanced treatments ahead of others and at the cost of the state while our schools are ranked as some of the lowest in the nation. Why should Reyes-Camarena and others like him receive $121,000-per-year treatments while the Oregon House and Senate are forced to cut $116 million for the coming school year?Take this money that ensures the premium health of soon-to-be-executed inmates and reallocate it to programs that boost overall education, driving down the crime rate and in turn reducing the number of crimes punishable by death.The solution is simple. What is holding us back?David Delgado, a graduate of St. Mary's School in Medford, is a sophomore at Stanford University.http://www.mailtribune.com/apps/pbcs.dll/article?AID=/20090614/OPINION/906140304/-1/NEWSMAP
If you want to give a kidney altruistically, you have to not care who it goes to. You also have to be prepared for the possibility that the recipient will 'waste' it - not do the right things and cause it to fail. You cannot make a decision in advance that it will only go to a worthy cause cos it might not. So, yes, donors need to be aware that their kidney could go to someone who they don't think deserves it. But should that be our decision? I don't want to play God and say who should or shouldn't get a kidney. The man on death row may not eventually get executed, so he should go on a list just like anyone else.
But where do we stop? Is it only death row people who shouldn't get one? What about just your average criminal? Would you be happy for a rapist/abuser to get one at all? What if he's been accused of rape/assault but got off on a technicality. Sorry I'm being the devil's advocate here, but I think it's a lot harder than you think to make a rule like that. And that's probably why there's this seemingly ridiculous situation happening in the first place.
why not try rxperimental therapy on prisoners. they're still getting top notch medical care and if anything goes wrong its no great loss and we learn from the experience.