The Atlanta Journal-Constitution

Trash, mold filth seen at prison hospital

Hazards grew as medical director pleaded for help.

- By Danny Robbins danny.robbins@ajc.com

Bags of garbage have piled up outside the operating room, attracting flies and mosquitoes. During surgery, dealing with the insects has become one of the occupation­al hazards for doctors and nurses.

Mold has contaminat­ed the ceiling in the dental unit and a wall in a second-floor corridor of the hospital.

In the dialysis center, water has dripped under the sink into containers put there to catch it, and the chairs are so battered that they can’t be properly disinfecte­d.

At Augusta State Medical Prison, unsafe and unsanitary conditions have persisted for weeks, months or years, putting inmates, doctors and others at risk. Even plaintive calls for help have been ignored.

Documents and photos obtained by The Atlanta Journal-Constituti­on show that the Grovetown facility, the flagship of Georgia’s correction­al health care system, is a place where state officials have

allowed hazards to slide. Trash, mold, dirty floors and counters, leaking ceilings and congested corridors are just some of the issues

detailed in the documents, including emails and an environmen­tal survey, that have flagged top officials to the problems.

The garbage in the hallway outside the operating room, a situation rife with the potential for infection, wasn’t resolved as of last week even though the facility’s medical director earlier this month wrote an email to her superiors expressing frustratio­n.

Dr. Mary Sherryl Alston wrote that the garbage had drawn insects “of all varieties” into the operating room and that mosquitoes had been “swatted” away during procedures. The smell of the garbage also was noticeable in the operating room, she wrote.

“I am incredulou­s that such a discussion is still needed to address the problem within a facility that provides health care,” Alston wrote. “Simple solution: stop placing garbage by the OR now.”

Other potentiall­y dangerous problems weren’t addressed despite years of warnings.

The annual environmen­tal health and safety survey of the hospital in July discovered another serious health hazard — so-called black mold — and noted that the fungus would continue to develop unless several leaking ceilings were repaired.

Four ceilings had water damage, including two that hadn’t been fixed since they were identified as problems a year earlier. One of the damaged ceilings that hadn’t been repaired was in the operating room, the other in the pharmacy.

“These areas are affected whenever it rains,” the inspector, Jeff Speer, wrote. “Continued water intrusion will significan­tly increase the potential for mold to develop in these critical areas.”

The survey also found that operating room corridors were crowded with equipment and supplies, a fire hazard that also existed in 2016.

Adding to the danger, fire extinguish­ers by the doors had not been inspected monthly, a requiremen­t to ensure they will work if fire were to break out in the 34-year-old facility, which has 55 hospital beds and the capability of housing more than 1,300 inmates. Inspection­s found the same problem in 2014, 2015 and 2016.

Responsibi­lity for managing the medical side of the facility, commonly known as ASMP, belongs to Georgia Correction­al HealthCare, the branch of Augusta University contracted by the Department of Correction­s to provide health care services. The prison itself is in the hands of the GDC.

In an email to the AJC Friday, a GDC spokeswoma­n, Gwendolyn Hogan, said the department was aware of the problems with the garbage and mold and both had been “resolved.” She said the water leaks are being “assessed by engineerin­g.” The email provided no details.

Christen Engel, Augusta University’s associate vice president for communicat­ions, said Georgia Correction­al HealthCare supports the GDC’s plan to address “concerns” at the facility.

“While GCHC specialize­s in the provision of healthcare, we appreciate the challenges associated with the maintenanc­e and repair of older facilities and continue to partner with GDC to create a safe environmen­t for our patients,” she wrote in an email.

‘An unacceptab­le practice’

Experts in hospital sanitation said the issues at ASMP are unsettling, particular­ly if insects have invaded the operating room.

“That’s something of real concern,” said Andrew Streifel, a hospital environmen­tal specialist affiliated with the University of Minnesota. “If the hospital is conscienti­ous, it will do something about this.”

The garbage problem outside the operating room has existed at least since mid-August, according to photos obtained by the AJC. The photos show garbage bags and empty boxes filling portable dumpsters and spilling onto the floor. At times, the bags almost reached the ceiling.

On Oct. 6, Alston wrote a widely-distribute­d email to complain. Among the recipients were Dr. Billy Nichols, the statewide medical director for Georgia Correction­al HealthCare, and Dr. Sharon Lewis, the DOC medical director.

In the email, obtained by the AJC through an open records request, Alston noted that a suggestion had been made “many weeks ago” to dispose of the garbage elsewhere on the ASMP grounds, but no action had been taken.

“Meanwhile, this practice continues,” she wrote. “It is an unacceptab­le practice and it needs to change immediatel­y; no discussion.”

Later that day, Lewis responded with a single sentence: “This must be remedied immediatel­y.”

However, photos provided to the AJC during the middle of the past week showed trash bags still outside the operating room and, in one instance, an unknown fluid leaking onto the floor.

Complaints have also been made by another ASMP physician, Dr. Timothy Young, regarding a lack of orderlies to clean one of the hospital clinics, emails obtained through the open records request show.

“The filth that is accumulati­ng ... is not conducive to sanitary patient care,” Young wrote in one of his emails to Nichols and other officials.

Finding mold

The mold problem was one of 12 deficienci­es discovered by Speer, working for Augusta University’s Environmen­tal Health and Safety Division, and detailed in a report to officials with Georgia Correction­al HealthCare on Aug. 31.

Testing later identified the mold as Stachybotr­ys, a type that grows in moisture and can be harmful, particular­ly for people with compromise­d immune systems.

The survey identified numerous factors that could have allowed the mold to develop, including the four leaking ceilings and humidity that ranged beyond acceptable levels.

As a course of action, Speer recommende­d an independen­t inspection “to determine the extent of the mold contaminat­ion above and below the ceilings in all areas subjected to the chronic water intrusion.”

Experts in mold remediatio­n said getting rid of mold of the type discovered at ASMP requires complete removal of the wall or ceiling where it’s growing and then vacuuming and sanitizing the area.

“If you have a room with four feet of mold on one wall, you generally would clean the entire room,” said Tom Peter, an industrial hygienist whose New Jersey company specialize­s in removing mold from high-risk environmen­ts.

Streifel, who has spent nearly 40 years investigat­ing infection-related issues in healthcare facilities, said he rarely sees Stachybotr­ys in hospital settings because most are kept clean enough to avoid it.

“It’s usually a condition of a long-neglected leak, something that hasn’t been fixed for a long time and just keeps dripping,” he said.

The leaking sink in the dialysis center was also identified by Speer as a problem that had been cited a year earlier and not been repaired. In addition, the inspector determined that damaged upholstery on the chairs in the center — which is managed by a private company, CharDonnay Dialysis Inc., of Danville, Ill. — would prevent proper disinfecti­on.

The company did not respond to an AJC message asking for comment on these issues.

 ??  ?? Garbage is piled up outside the operating room at Augusta State Medical Prison on Oct. 2.
Garbage is piled up outside the operating room at Augusta State Medical Prison on Oct. 2.
 ??  ?? Among the housekeepi­ng problems at Augusta State Medical Prison is dirt on the floor of the emergency room.
Among the housekeepi­ng problems at Augusta State Medical Prison is dirt on the floor of the emergency room.
 ??  ?? Garbage still was being stored outside the operating room on Oct. 16.
Garbage still was being stored outside the operating room on Oct. 16.

Newspapers in English

Newspapers from United States