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« on: February 14, 2007, 05:25:57 PM » |
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State inmate gets new heart
By Steve Wiegand -- Bee Staff Writer Published 5:30 a.m. PST Friday, Jan. 25, 2002 A California inmate has become the first person to receive an organ transplant while in state prison, adding fuel to the debate over the costs of providing medical care to an expanding, and aging, prison population. In an operation performed without fanfare at the Stanford Medical Center three weeks ago, a 31-year-old two-time felon was given a new heart. The taxpayer-financed operation and subsequent aftercare, which prison officials estimate could carry a total price tag of $1 million, is certain to raise questions as to whether there are limits to the kinds of treatment ailing inmates must be given. "We don't have a policy per se," said Russ Heimerich, a spokesman for the California Department of Corrections. "We have a requirement, based in law and in losing many, many lawsuits, to provide medically necessary care to inmates. "The courts have told us that inmates have a constitutional right to health care. You and I don't, but inmates do. ... We have to do whatever is medically necessary to save an inmate's life." The inmate, whose name is being withheld by the department for reasons of medical confidentiality, is serving a 14-year sentence for a 1996 robbery in Los Angeles. Prison officials say he will not be eligible for parole until late 2008 because this is his second felony conviction. After a longtime heart problem caused by a viral infection became critical, he was transferred to the Stanford Medical Center from the prison system's medical institution at Vacaville. He received a new heart from an unidentified donor Jan. 3, and has been returned to Vacaville. A spokeswoman for the medical center said the cost of the procedure was $150,000 to $200,000. But that does not include security costs, aftercare or post-transplant medication that can run as much as $21,000 per year. Department of Corrections officials have estimated that total costs could reach $1 million before the inmate is released. After his release, he will have to seek private insurance or qualify for government-run medical coverage such as Medi-Cal. Faced with a prison population that is growing, aging and plagued with communicable diseases such as AIDS and hepatitis C, California's medical bill for its 160,000 inmates has swelled in recent years. The department will spend an estimated $663 million in the current budget year for medical treatment, an 11 percent increase over the previous year. Like most government agencies, the department does not have medical insurance because premiums would be prohibitively expensive and comprehensive policies difficult to obtain. In the case of organ transplants, cost is not the only issue. A paucity of donated livers, hearts, kidneys and lungs means thousands of people who need a new organ die each year while waiting. As of Wednesday, according to United Network for Organ Sharing (UNOS), the nonprofit group that manages national transplant waiting lists for the federal government, there were 4,139 people waiting for new hearts nationally, 549 of those in California and six in the Sacramento region. "We're essentially giving a heart to an inmate when there are other people out there, potentially more productive members of society, who are in line as well," said the Department of Corrections' Heimerich. "It's a tough problem."
In 1976, the U.S. Supreme Court held that "deliberate indifference" to a prison inmate's health problems constituted cruel and unusual punishment and thus violated the Eighth Amendment of the Constitution. Since then, hundreds of subsequent cases have established that inmates have a right to medical care equal to that of the public in general. Last April, the governor's office reported there were more than 700 individual lawsuits pending by prison inmates over medical care issues. The state paid out $2 million to settle prison-medical care lawsuits in the fiscal year that ended in June, including $350,000 to a female inmate who claimed a prison doctor for years ignored signs she had breast cancer. "Medical care is probably the biggest cause for (inmates) bringing suits against the states, because they are not providing adequate medical care," said Kara Gotsch, an attorney with the American Civil Liberties Union's National Prison Project. "Certainly costs are going to rise as the population ages and medical procedures become more expensive ... but prisoners have a constitutional right to medical care. It's as simple as that." Similarly, prison inmates are not discriminated against when it comes to deciding who gets what organ. "Whether someone is in jail is not going to enter directly into consideration," said Anne Paschke, a spokeswoman for the United Network for Organ Sharing. "It could enter into consideration indirectly when it comes to criteria like their history of following doctors' orders, drug and alcohol use and so on, things that many prison inmates might have trouble meeting. But just being in prison doesn't disqualify someone." Under the network's procedure, a patient diagnosed by a transplant center as needing an organ is placed on a waiting list. When an organ becomes available, the information about it, such as the age and gender of the donor, is entered into the computer. Those on the waiting list who are not a good match are dropped from consideration for that organ, and the rest are ranked according to a number of factors such as immediacy of need, geography and likelihood of the transplantation's success. Some states have attempted to avoid the issue by simply releasing very ill inmates. "What they do is trigger early release or compassionate release to get the inmate out of the system," said Scott Chavez, vice president of the National Commission on Correctional Health Care, a not-for-profit organization of medical providers that focuses on better health care in prisons, jails and juvenile detention centers. "That way they avoid having to do the transplantation and having to pay for it." But Heimerich said early release was never a consideration in the case of the heart patient at Vacaville. "Compassionate release" is generally granted in California, he said, only when the prisoner has less than six months to live but is not in imminent danger of dying. In this case, the inmate's condition was critical when he received the transplant. Statistics show that heart transplant recipients in the inmate's age range have a 70 percent chance of living at least five additional years. "The judge did not sentence this guy to death," said Heimerich, "and who knows? He may get out and become a productive citizen."
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