Doctor: Inmates should be able to get transplantsTuesday, June 05, 2007
By Pat Shellenbarger
The Grand Rapids Press
A policy barring Michigan prison inmates from receiving kidney transplants should be overturned, a doctor appointed to monitor medical care inside Jackson prisons urged in a report to a federal judge.
Denying prisoners with advanced kidney disease the right to be considered for a transplant is "incompatible with the practice of medicine," Dr. Robert Cohen told U.S. District Judge Richard Enslen.
"As a physician, I find this extremely disturbing. All authorities agree that transplantation is the recommended treatment for ESRD (end-stage renal disease)."
Corrections Department spokesman Russ Marlan confirmed his agency has a policy against organ transplants for inmates.
"There are not enough kidneys available to provide law-abiding citizens out in the community," he said, adding kidney dialysis is an alternative offered to inmates.
Cohen agreed prisoners should not be more favorably considered for transplant than anyone else, but neither should they be denied a place on a transplant waiting list simply because they are in prison, he said.
A transplant is cheaper than keeping a patient on dialysis indefinitely and can add years to a patient's life, Cohen said.
Two of the 60 prisoners receiving kidney dialysis in the Southern Michigan Correctional Facility died in April, according to court records, although it was unclear whether transplants would have saved them.
"There were serious deficiencies in the medical care provided both patients," attorneys for a group of inmates wrote in a brief filed last week with the 6th U.S. Circuit Court of Appeals.
Cohen's recommendation is the latest development in a long-running class action lawsuit over conditions in the Jackson prisons. In May, Enslen temporarily barred the state from going ahead with plans to close Southern Michigan Correctional Facility this summer, a decision the state appealed to the 6th U.S. Circuit Court of Appeals.
Attorneys for the inmates asked the appeals court to deny the appeal and allow the case to proceed before Enslen. The attorneys contend the decision to close the prison is an attempt to get out from under federal court jurisdiction by scattering hundreds of medically fragile inmates to prisons statewide. The inmates' attorneys asked Enslen to grant them access to Corrections Department records to determine if the closing is an attempt to evade the court's jurisdiction.
Marlan confirmed the lawsuit is one reason corrections officials marked Southern Michigan Correctional Facility for closing, "but it's absurd to say we're going to close this facility just to get out from under the lawsuit."
Gov. Jennifer Granholm has ordered the Corrections Department to cut its spending by $92 million a year, a directive Marlan said can only be met by closing prisons. Fighting the lawsuit, he said, cost the state $800,000 in attorney fees last year and $700,000 this year.
The state is facing a July 15 deadline ordered by Enslen to install air conditioning equipment to assure that the heat index in parts of the Southern Michigan Correctional Facility does not exceed 90 degrees. That order came after a 21-year-old inmate died last August while shackled to a bed during a heat wave.
Complying with that order could cost the state $10 million for permanent air conditioning units and more than $1 million for temporary equipment, Marlan said.
Send e-mail to the author: pshellenbarger@grpress.com
http://www.mlive.com/news/grpress/index.ssf?/base/news-36/1181051180120950.xml&coll=6