Sarah Mirando  |  April 1, 2015

Category: Consumer News

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prison health careThe Arizona Legislature has approved a $12.3 million budget increase to help the Department of Corrections meet the terms of a class action settlement over claims it provided “grossly inadequate” medical, dental and mental health care that amounted to cruel and unusual punishment.

Arizona’s inmate health care system was so flawed, plaintiffs alleged, that it caused deaths and preventable injuries.

U.S. Magistrate Judge David K. Duncan of Phoenix approved the class action settlement on February 18. Under the agreement, the Arizona Department of Corrections was required to request additional state funds to increase staffing for medical and mental health care workers within its facilities.

Arizona lawmakers approved the fiscal year 2016 budget increase on March 7.

The money will help the DOC meet more than 100 health-care performance measures mandated by the settlement agreement that include the monitoring of inmates with diabetes, hypertension and other chronic conditions. All prisoners must also receive:

  • Annual flu vaccinations;
  • Immunizations required by the CDC for prisoners with chronic diseases;
  • Annual colon cancer screenings for prisoners ages 50 to 75;
  • Mammogram screenings for female prisoners age 50 and older; and
  • Improved dental care.

 

In addition, prisoners in solitary confinement must be given more out-of-cell time for exercise, showers, medical care, mental health treatment, classification hearings or visiting. And all maximum custody prisoners must receive meals that meet the caloric and nutritional content of the meals given to other prisoners.

The Arizona Department of Corrections class action settlement does not apply to inmates in private state prisons.

Class Action Allegations

The settlement resolves a 2012 class action lawsuit (Parsons v. Ryan) filed by 13 inmates who claimed that emergency treatment and other medical care was often delayed or outright denied, and that it was difficult to obtain medications and medical devices. Plaintiffs said that their basic health needs were not met and that critically ill prisoners “begged prison officials for treatment, only to be told ‘be patient,’ ‘it’s all in your head,’ or ‘pray’ to be cured.”

They further claimed that some prisoners were kept in extreme isolation under inhumane conditions that frequently included inadequate nutrition and no outdoor exercise for months or years on end. Mentally ill prisoners were also denied therapy and psychiatric medication, they alleged, putting them and other inmates at risk for serious harm and even death.

“I personally have been involved in prison litigation for over 40 years, and I have never seen a worse example of inadequate medical and mental health care,” said Dan Pachoda, legal director for the ACLU in Arizona, which teamed with the American Civil Liberties Union, the Prison Law Office and several Arizona law firms to represent the prisoners.

The hotly contested case made its way to a federal appeals court last spring, which rejected efforts by the DOC to limit the lawsuit to just the specific claims of the named plaintiffs.

On June 5, 2014, the 9th U.S. Circuit Court of Appeals affirmed the district court’s order certifying a class and subclass of more than 33,000 inmates in 10 Arizona prison facilities.

The appeals court agreed with the lower court’s ruling that attorneys for the inmates had provided detailed references that supported their allegations of deficient health care, and also provided information that showed spending on certain services “had plummeted by 38%” even though there was no similar decline in the number of prisoners. According to Governor Ducey’s budget proposal, Arizona’s inmate population has grown by an average of 82 inmates per month since July 2012.

Taken together, the evidence suggested that injuries suffered by the plaintiffs were examples of “systematic failures” that would require a complete overhaul of the prison system’s health care policies – not simply correcting the problems of the 13 plaintiffs, the Court of Appeals said.

Four months after the DOC lost its appeal, the parties entered a settlement agreement on October 9, just days before the case was to go to trial – a move that potentially saved the state millions of dollars in legal costs.

In his approval order, Judge Duncan said the case would likely travel to the Court of Appeals again if it was not settled.

“If that happened, there would be further delay, and it is not unreasonable to conclude that this case that was started in March three years ago would be continuing for another two years past this time period,” said Duncan – time that would be spent “expending more money on battle rather than redressing needs.”

In addition to its own legal costs, the DOC will have to pay $4.9 million in attorneys’ fees to the plaintiffs as mandated by the settlement agreement.

Given Arizona’s state budget crisis, Judge Duncan said an expensive, long-drawn-out litigation would result in dramatic cuts. “And what that means is there will be fewer dollars to do things that need to be done.”

The class action settlement provides for ongoing monitoring and oversight by the prisoners’ lawyers to make sure the state is complying with its terms. The DOC will have 12 months to meet or exceed a 75% threshold for these performance measures. This will increase to 85% after two years.

The Arizona Prison Health Care Class Action Lawsuit is Victor Parsons, et al. v. Charles Ryan, et al., Case No. 12-00601-PHX-DJH, U.S. District Court, District of Arizona.

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21 thoughts onArizona Approves $12.3M Budget for Prison Inmates’ Class Action Settlement

  1. david says:

    Where do I go to get in on this lawsuit?

  2. Delina Camou says:

    Well I have done time in Perryville woman’s prison along with my mother between the years 2003 2008 how do I claim. Especially after they mis dianoased my mother with cancer. Given all types of medications than advised later that it was choans.

  3. Michael Rogers says:

    I did 6 months in durango in 2012. And several other short stints since 2006. Very interested in joining this class section. My email is nymichaelrogers@gmail.com

  4. Evan says:

    I spent 7month in Durango and got really sick the next day after my arrival

  5. Patrick Keller says:

    I did a total of 9 years and 9 months in the Arizona Department of Corrections. I have a plethora of medical issues including, but not limited to: auto-immune disease, spinal stenosis, scoliosis, degenerative disc disease, herniated disc, sciatica, osteopenia, hypothyroidism, hepatitis C, and a whole slew of mental health diagnosises. I have been heavily involved with the medical “services” offered and have had to file grievances multiple times (probably a couple dozen) because I was denied medical care. AzDoC was ran “in-house” when I first went to prison in 2006. Around 2011 or 2012 AzDoC decided to privatize the medical services and it was given to the highest bidder, Corizon. I thought things couldn’t possibly get much worse then they already were. I was wrong. I saw a DRASTIC change in every aspect when it went private. I’ve seen some things go on there that you’d never in a million years think anyone could do to another human being. I’ve seen people DIE as a direct result of negligence. They love to doctor up the paperwork and lose things or just plain lie. I’ve known people that have been successful in suing and I’ve walked away with some chunks of change but only after being tied up in court for 5 to 10 years. Corizon is a corrupt inhumane unprofessional deathtrap and AzDoC knows it. But it all comes down to Dollars and cents whatever is profitable. If somebody needs a treatment for a disease and corizon calculate it will cost x amount and a wrongful death lawsuit will cost y amount then they’re going to go with the cheapest one. If you don’t have somebody on the streets advocating for you you’re even in a worse position. It’s funny because I’ve been out a prison for going on three years and I’ve tried half a dozen times to get my medical file from AZ. And they just straight up stonewall me or don’t respond. That’s my medical file that’s my information and it’s illegal for them to deny me. But I guess when you have the whole state behind you you’re pretty much untouchable. We’re not all bad people were not horrible horrible scumbags and we are entitled to our constitutional rights and some form of medical attention when we need it. If anybody has any information that can help me I would love to hear from them.

  6. Rob says:

    I recently spent a total of 123 days at Durango, I would like information about joining a class action lawsuit. I had health and injury issues where I was housed, (D-4 and D-8, the working pod).

  7. Darrell says:

    I spent 1 year in Durango and I can say it was absolutely horrible and filthy. If there’s a lawsuit against that place how do i get in on it

  8. Art says:

    I was in Durango Jail three different times, ranging 4 months at one stay, then around 2 or 3, then a 2 or 3 week stay. I believe the first was in 1993, 1994 or 5, then 2017. I also did 10 days in tent city back in 2002. I could be a little off on the dates.

  9. Michael Suttle says:

    ” According to Governor Ducey’s budget proposal, Arizona’s inmate population has grown by an average of 82 inmates per month since July 2012″. That’s hilarious. I just got out of prison yesterday. I went into ADOC custody Feb 12 2016. My number begins with 308. Upon my release yesterday, new inmates were coming in with 327 numbers. Seems like a LOT more than Doucheys 82 per month. Just saying.

  10. Larry W. Troup says:

    I worked a lot with asbestos and was in Darango Jail and want info on joining lawsuit

    1. Thomas webb says:

      I also would like that information if you have it please I can be reached at WebbThomas660@gmail.com. Thank you

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