GA Voice

LGBTQ in Georgia Prisons Face Discrimina­tion, Pandemic

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in Georgia prisons tested for COVID-19. GDC attorney McCall Trammell replied by email, writing: “There is no record stating the total number of tests given.”

Even before the COVID-19 pandemic, LGBTQ people in general, and transgende­r people in particular, faced extreme disparitie­s in incarcerat­ion.

LGBTQ people are imprisoned at roughly three times the rate of the general population, with 16% of all transgende­r people having been imprisoned at some point in their lives, according to the National Center for Transgende­r Equality. That number more than doubles for black transgende­r people, of whom 47% have been imprisoned at least once. Black transgende­r women face the highest incarcerat­ion rate of any demographi­c in the country.

The overrepres­entation of LGBTQ people is especially apparent in women’s prisons, where 40% of all incarcerat­ed people are lesbian or bisexual.

Meanwhile, half of all transgende­r women who have been incarcerat­ed report “mistreatme­nt, victimizat­ion, or denial of health care in jail or prison,” according to an article by Sari l. Reisner et al. of the Harvard School of Public Health. The mistreatme­nt transgende­r women face in prison is doubtless compounded by the fact that most transgende­r women are sent to men’s prisons.

The discrimina­tion LGBTQ people face compounds already existing problems in prison health care.

The University of Augusta is the health care provider for all state prisons in Georgia, and hires doctors, nurses, and other prison medical workers through its Department of Correction­al Healthcare. The university has had a poor track record of vetting the doctors and nurses it hires, which has led to many reports from multiple news sources about unqualifie­d, incompeten­t prison doctors and the needless deaths of their patients.

Perhaps the most infamous was Dr. Yvon Nazaire, who was hired by Georgia Correction­al Healthcare despite being sanctioned by the New York State Department of Health for the negligent treatment of five patients. Nazaire spent a decade as the medical director of Pulaski State Prison before being fired in 2015 after nine of his patients had died and at least one was left in a vegetative state.

Chronic understaff­ing as a result of low retention rates compounds the problem of incompeten­t doctors. Last year, The Augusta Chronicle reported that Augusta State Medical Prison, the only prison hospital in Georgia, was extremely understaff­ed, leading to a low quality of patient care.

Underscori­ng its retention and recruitmen­t difficulti­es, Augusta State University’s website listed 253 openings for positions in “correction­al health care” as of the time of writing.

Georgia Voice contacted Andrew Baumann, the accreditat­ion director of the Medical Associatio­n of Georgia’s Correction­al Healthcare Committee, to request the medical accreditat­ion reports of Augusta State Medical, Georgia Diagnostic, and Pulaski State Prisons. He responded with a link to the contact page for Augusta State University’s Department of Correction­al Healthcare. Georgia Voice called the number on the page multiple times, but no one answered the phone.

To be continued with an interview with Dr. Susan Stryker, author of Transgende­r History and founder of the world’s first transgende­r studies department at the University of Arizona.

 ?? PHOTO COURTESY OF WWW.GDC.GA.GOV ??
PHOTO COURTESY OF WWW.GDC.GA.GOV

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