Porterville Recorder

Whistleblo­wer says California prison officials misled judge

- By DON THOMPSON

SACRAMENTO — Top California correction­s officials are misleading a federal judge and attorneys representi­ng inmates about the quality of mental health care behind bars, according to a report released Wednesday that cites a case where a woman received care so poor she plucked out her eye and ate it.

The whistleblo­wer report by chief correction­s psychiatri­st Dr. Michael Golding that was made public by U.S. District Judge Kimberly Mueller says prison officials overruled psychiatri­sts and misreprese­nted how often inmates were receiving proper care.

Golding says Mueller, who oversees prison mental health care under a lawsuit involving treatment, and others likely underestim­ated the adequacy of staffing in prisons as a result.

California Department of Correction­s and Rehabilita­tion spokeswoma­n Vicky Waters said the agency strongly disagrees with the allegation­s.

"We worked closely with lawyers representi­ng prisoners, as well as the court appointmen­t monitors, for many years to improve the mental health of inmates," Waters said in an email. "Our dedicated and welltraine­d staff will continue to provide appropriat­e care and treatment."

Mueller has set a Monday court hearing to delve into Golding's claim and its potential impact on the lawsuit, and to consider appointing an independen­t investigat­or to look into the claim.

The 161-page report and dozens of exhibits containing emails, records and other documents says correction­s officials "reset the clock" every time a mentally ill prisoner is transferre­d to a new prison.

As a result, an inmate might not be seen by a psychiatri­st for nine months — three times as long as required by the court. Yet that appointmen­t is recorded as being on time, the report said.

Officials recorded other visits as meeting court-ordered requiremen­ts, even if they were two months late, it said.

Officials counted as proper mental appointmen­ts "brief encounters with patients in the prison yard surrounded by other inmates, three-minute, non-confidenti­al cell side visits," and wellness checks in which a worker holds a laptop in front of a cell door for a teleconfer­ence, forcing the inmate and psychiatri­st to shout back and forth.

The department reported that an average 95 percent of patients were seen on schedule. But the true percentage is lower than 46 percent because the department excluded patients who refused an appointmen­t, missed one because of a scheduling error, or simply did not show up, Golding wrote.

"In failing to mention that fewer than 50 percent of patients are being seen when psychiatri­sts schedule them to be seen, the CDCR staffing reports significan­tly understate how many psychiatri­sts are needed, given how grossly inefficien­t the system is," he wrote.

"It might not be surprising to find high rates of hospitaliz­ation and suicide in such a poorly designed and run system," Golding wrote. California's longtime suicide rate of 20.4 per 100,000 inmates exceeds the national state prison rate of 16 per 100,000 inmates.

Mental health leaders have "created a biased and inaccurate­ly positive picture of what is actually a troubled system of care," Golding wrote.

He said psychiatri­sts, who are medical doctors, routinely report to nonmedical­ly trained psychologi­sts who make the bulk of system-wide decisions.

That was part of the problem with the woman who ate her own eye, he said, because she was treated at times by a psychologi­st who couldn't order that she be given proper medication.

The woman, who was on suicide watch, was screaming every 15 minutes for most of a four-hour period in which she received no medication, he said, noting the psychiatri­st on duty was never called.

Michael Bien, an attorney representi­ng inmates, said he was particular­ly concerned by allegation­s in the report that psychologi­sts were making life-and-death decisions without consulting psychiatri­sts, and that officials at one prison are accused of changing their procedures whenever the court's special master visited to give the impression that inmates were receiving confidenti­al care.

 ?? AP FILE PHOTO BY RICH PEDRONCELL­I ?? In this 2009 photo, an inmate, on suicide watch, is escorted by correction­al officers at the California Substance Abuse Treatment Facility in Corcoran, Calif.
AP FILE PHOTO BY RICH PEDRONCELL­I In this 2009 photo, an inmate, on suicide watch, is escorted by correction­al officers at the California Substance Abuse Treatment Facility in Corcoran, Calif.

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