“Even Though the System Had Failed Him His Entire Life, We Were Failing Him Yet Again”: How Clinical, Welfare, and Penal Medicine Interact to Drive Health Inequities and Medical Moral Injury
Abstract
:1. Background
“I started acting out…As I got older, it just became a cycle of me getting in and out of jail. And then when I turned 18, I started going to the county jail. And then I started doing time in prison…I had never seen heroin until I went to prison. I caught hep-C in prison…Prison didn’t really teach me anything.”
“In the county jail they treat you like they don’t care. Everything is like, ‘Oh, drink some water you’ll be alright, drink some water you’ll be alright’. [About the process of seeing a physician] You fill out a form…Once you fill out the form, it’s 13–14 days just for you to see the doctor. And then… It feels kinda hopeless you know. To fill out a form because it’s like, ‘Oh I have this wrong with me, if I fill out a form, by the time I get there, I’ll probably already be OK.’ So that’s how a lot of people feel like. I might go look for someone who has the pills I need. I went looking for pills for a cold. Even the nurses will give you the medicine because they know it will take forever to see the doctor. It’s just such as struggle even just to get anything then and there.”
“I just, I just want a chance. A good, solid chance.”
2. Social Analysis Concepts
2.1. Hyper-Incarceration and Prison Are Determinants of Health
“Then I went to prison again and I found out I had caught…endocarditis. And I got the surgery for endocarditis the first time. And after that, I didn’t get a chance to recover the right way. I got sent back to jail. I didn’t get sent to a program. I didn’t get the right transitioning into the life I should have lived. I went straight to jail. And in jail I started doing drugs again…[I did not have a] support system to help me fully. [A support system that was not], ‘It’s my way or the high way’, [instead a support system that said], ‘Here let me help you take a step forward, here let me help you step forward and take a step forward.’”(Adam)
“When you guys send forms with us of recommendations and [they state] ‘this person is supposed to take this medication, and this medicine and this medicine’, when it gets there [i.e., prison], everything gets disregarded, and it goes down the hill. it goes to the doctor and the doctor says…Like the last time when I got antibiotics, the doctor told [me], ‘Oh, I don’t really think you need this.’”(Adam)
2.2. Clinical, Penal, and Welfare Medicine Interact to Produce and Maintain Patient Health Inequities
“Unfortunately, because of a combination of a lack of treatment follow-through, access to healthcare, and drug abuse programs in prison, Adam had a relapse of his endocarditis.”(One of Adam’s physicians)
“My drug addiction was just hard because [of] the people I hang out with, I go back to the same shit you know. That’s why I need a program to help me get into housing because when I don’t have nowhere to go, I go the hood.”
“I just didn’t have no money. So, I went back to where I knew I could get money, you know… It was the addiction and the lack of support that I had, I had my sister, but I didn’t have nobody else. So, I didn’t have anywhere to go, so like fuck it I’ll just go back home. I know that there’s programs where they take you and they build you and build you until you get home and they provide you with housing, provide with you like a job. Like if I was at my sisters and I had a job, I think I would be able to make it. Like, Suboxone clinics I think.”(Adam)
“I went through the [recovery] and I tried to go check into a [substance use] program, and I needed to find the right program because that program wouldn’t take me due to my medical issues.”(Adam)
“...Our surgeon colleagues felt like they could not justifiably offer care to this poor individual due to it being too high risk, a short-term solution, and unfair from a resource standpoint to perform a third surgery.”(One of Adam’s physicians)
“We made phone calls to other hospitals but were limited by his incarcerated status and complex history.”(One of Adam’s physicians)
2.3. Medical Moral Injury Is Structurally Driven
“When his life intersected with ours in healthcare, I feel like he had been failed so many times by society and we did not have the ability to help him.”(One of Adam’s physicians)
“We had to tell Adam that there was nothing we could do for him. We had to tell him, that even though the system had failed him his entire life, we were failing him yet again, and this time our failures were going to cost him his life.”(One of Adam’s physicians)
“The case has stuck with me more than any other as a physician because I have never been in the situation of telling a [young patient] that they will die of an illness where we typically do have interventions to offer.”(One of Adam’s physicians)
“I have question[ed] if I felt like the principle of justice was not honored in his final days. He had self-admittedly made serious mistakes and poor life choices that resulted in him being in this situation. But he also expressed a desire to change, to seek treatment, and to try to turn his life around. He also was born with a congenital condition that predisposed him to this disease, suffered from adverse childhood experiences, and had been in the cycle of incarceration and substance use—these have all been studied in medical and psychological literature to be outside of an individual’s control.”(One of Adam’s physicians)
3. Discussion
4. Implications
5. Conclusions
Funding
Conflicts of Interest
Abbreviations
DVT | Deep vein thrombosis |
ED | Emergency department |
EM | Emergency medicine |
IDU-IE | Injection-drug-use-related infective endocarditis |
MOUD | Medications for opioid use disorder |
PTSD | Post-traumatic stress disorder |
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Ganesh, S.S.; Joyner, K.B.; Samra, S.; Bluthenthal, R.N.; Schneberk, T.W. “Even Though the System Had Failed Him His Entire Life, We Were Failing Him Yet Again”: How Clinical, Welfare, and Penal Medicine Interact to Drive Health Inequities and Medical Moral Injury. Healthcare 2024, 12, 1354. https://doi.org/10.3390/healthcare12131354
Ganesh SS, Joyner KB, Samra S, Bluthenthal RN, Schneberk TW. “Even Though the System Had Failed Him His Entire Life, We Were Failing Him Yet Again”: How Clinical, Welfare, and Penal Medicine Interact to Drive Health Inequities and Medical Moral Injury. Healthcare. 2024; 12(13):1354. https://doi.org/10.3390/healthcare12131354
Chicago/Turabian StyleGanesh, Siddhi S., Kyle B. Joyner, Shamsher Samra, Ricky N. Bluthenthal, and Todd W. Schneberk. 2024. "“Even Though the System Had Failed Him His Entire Life, We Were Failing Him Yet Again”: How Clinical, Welfare, and Penal Medicine Interact to Drive Health Inequities and Medical Moral Injury" Healthcare 12, no. 13: 1354. https://doi.org/10.3390/healthcare12131354
APA StyleGanesh, S. S., Joyner, K. B., Samra, S., Bluthenthal, R. N., & Schneberk, T. W. (2024). “Even Though the System Had Failed Him His Entire Life, We Were Failing Him Yet Again”: How Clinical, Welfare, and Penal Medicine Interact to Drive Health Inequities and Medical Moral Injury. Healthcare, 12(13), 1354. https://doi.org/10.3390/healthcare12131354