ACLU Says Failure To Properly Administer Medicines At Wisconsin Prison Puts Women's Lives At Risk (1/23/2009)
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MILWAUKEE – The American Civil Liberties Union, the ACLU of Wisconsin and the
law firm of Jenner & Block today filed a motion in federal court seeking an
immediate halt to the dangerously dysfunctional system of ordering and
administering medication to prisoners at the Taycheedah Correctional
Institution, Wisconsin's largest women's prison.
According to the motion, filed in the U.S. District Court for the Eastern
District of Wisconsin, prisoners at Taycheedah in need of medicine for
infections, life-threatening chronic diseases, pain and other serious medical
conditions are forced to wait weeks on end and, if and when their medications do
arrive, they often are the wrong medications in the wrong doses.
"The medication system at Taycheedah is a disaster waiting to happen," said
Gabriel Eber, staff attorney with the ACLU National Prison Project. "For some
medications, there is not even a system of checking for dangerous interactions
between drugs before a prisoner starts taking a new prescription. The clock is
ticking while the state gambles with the health and safety of over 700
women."
At Taycheedah, medications – including powerful psychiatric medications – are
administered to prisoners by correctional officers with no medical training. As
a result, prisoners frequently receive medications prescribed for other
prisoners and overdoses of their own medications. Expert witnesses for both
parties agree that this is a dangerous practice. Taycheedah is one of the
few state prisons in the nation that does not require nurses or similarly
trained medical personnel to administer prisoners' medications.
According to the motion, the failure of prison officials at Taycheedah to
ensure that prisoners properly receive medication has forced numerous prisoners
to endure unnecessary and prolonged illness, injury, pain and hospitalization
and all prisoners receiving medications are at a significant risk of harm and
even death. The motion charges that prison officials have known for years that
prisoners have been at significant risk, but despite knowing ways to reduce that
risk have simply failed to take the actions necessary to do so.
"Taycheedah's medication system causes needless pain and suffering," said
Larry Dupuis, Legal Director for the ACLU of Wisconsin. "The Constitution
prohibits the state from ignoring a substantial threat to the health and safety
of the women at Taycheedah."
The motion was filed as part of a 2006 class-action lawsuit in which
Taycheedah prisoners charge that grossly deficient medical and mental health
care at Taycheedah endangers the lives of prisoners. The motion asks that state
officials be required to ensure that prisoners' medical prescriptions are filled
in a timely and accurate fashion and that medications be distributed and
administered by licensed practical nurses.
A copy of the motion is available online at: www.aclu.org/prison/medical/38467lgl20090123.html
Additional information about the ACLU is available online at: www.aclu.org
Additional information about the ACLU of Wisconsin is available online at: www.aclu-wi.org
Additional information about Jenner & Block is available online at: www.jenner.com
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