The Atlanta Journal-Constitution

Some prisoners wait months for tests, treatment

Despite backlog, state says urgent cases get quick response.

- By Danny Robbins danny.robbins@ajc.com

Thousands of Georgia prison inmates, including some who could be gravely ill, have yet to undergo recommende­d tests or consult with specialist­s because of a massive backlog in the Department of Correction­s’ approval process, documents obtained by The Atlanta Journal-Constituti­on reveal.

As of last week, nearly 2,750 orders for inmates to see oncologist­s, cardiologi­sts and other specialist­s or to undergo tests such as colonoscop­ies and CT scans were pending approval, the documents show. Of most concern: Nearly 500 of the orders had been submitted more than two months ago.

The backlog raises the possibilit­y that some inmates are being required to wait dangerousl­y long periods of time for specialize­d care, even when their symptoms appear serious and practition­ers at their facilities believe tests or evaluation­s by specialist­s are necessary.

In one case examined by the AJC, inmate Robert Carey Seymour waited five months before he could be examined by a specialist for a growth on his face suspected to be skin cancer.

When Seymour was finally seen by the specialist, a second, larger growth had appeared in the same area. He finally underwent surgery in October and is now slated to undergo radiation.

“They weren’t talking radiation or chemo at first, but then it got progressiv­ely worse,” said Seymour’s sister, Sissie Herring.

Randy Sauls, the Department of Correction­s’ assistant commission­er of health services, acknowledg­ed that there is a backlog of pending cases that typically stays around 2,000, but he said he doesn’t consider it a problem. That’s because the system, which receives between 150 and 200 new requests a day, is focused on making sure the most urgent cases are approved expeditiou­sly, he said.

“You would like it to be as close to zero as you could make it,” Sauls said in an interview. “But (the requests) come fast. And a lot of them are routine. They are just follow-ups.”

However, some experts in correction­al medicine said the backlog indicates a process that appears alarmingly dysfunctio­nal, particular­ly with so many orders still pending approval after 60 days.

“Generally, if someone has a delay of more than 60 days, they need to see a provider to make sure there’s no harm occurring because of the extended delay,” said Dr. Michael Puisis, a Chicago physician who has spent more than 30 years working in cor- rectional medicine.

The responsibi­lity for approving consults belongs to the Department of Correction­s’ utilizatio­n management unit. The department has oversight even though it contracts with Georgia Correction­al HealthCare, a division of Augusta University, to provide medical care in the state’s public prisons.

Utilizatio­n management is under the direction of GDC’s statewide medical director, Dr. Sharon Lewis. When doctors, physician assistants or nurse practition­ers order consults for inmates, the informatio­n is entered into a database. A team of five nurses working out of the GDC headquarte­rs in Forsyth then reviews the orders to see whether the service is available, medically appropriat­e and necessary.

The documents the AJC obtained showing the back- log don’t identify the inmates whose cases are pending. However, they do list the ser- vices requested. And those suggest that some inmates with serious health issues are being forced to wait unrea- sonably long periods for care.

Among the cases shown as still pending after 60 days last week were eight consults with oncologist­s, eight with cardiologi­sts, seven with neu- rosurgeons, seven with pul- monary specialist­s and nine with infectious disease specialist­s. Also shown as still pending after 60 days were 14 colonoscop­ies, 24 MRI scans, 22 CT scans and 17 sonograms.

In one instance detailed in a separate document obtained by the AJC, a colo- noscopy was ordered for an unnamed inmate in mid-July. The order, categorize­d as routine, was because of rectal bleeding. It wasn’t approved until mid-September. As of early this week, the procedure still hadn’t been done, meaning the inmate remains in limbo five months after his symptoms were recognized.

Puisis, who has served as a jail and prison medical director in Illinois and New Mexico, said colonoscop­ies don’t always require quick approval, but one ordered for an inmate with rectal bleeding would probably be cause for immediate attention.

“If you were getting a routine, preventive colonoscop­y, (the timing) might not be a big deal,” he said. “But if you have blood in your stool, it would be a big deal.”

Told that eight oncology consults remained pend- ing even though they were requested more than 60 days ago, Puisis expressed surprise.

“Oncology?” he said. “I mean, you can make the assumption that that’s prob- ably not good.”

Herring said she grew increasing­ly concerned as Seymour, incarcerat­ed at the Burrus Correction­al Training Center in Forsyth on a murder conviction from the mid-1990s, complained that he wasn’t being seen by an oncologist for a growth on his left temple discovered early this year.

“He kept saying, ‘I don’t know why I’m not on the list,’” she said. “This went on for months.” Herring said she was horrified when she saw Seymour in April because, by then, a second growth was “protruding” from his face. That led her to contact a family friend in state government for help in making sure her brother got his appointmen­t.

“It took (the friend’s push- ing) for Carey to see the oncol- ogist,” she said.

Sauls, who was hired for his position in August 2016 after 25 years in hospital administra- tion, said he wasn’t familiar with Seymour’s case. Some consults may be delayed because of inmate movement and other non-medical issues, but most that require serious attention are quickly flagged by the utilizatio­n management nurses, he said.

“The nurses know from looking at the charts which ones should go first,” he said.

Practition­ers are expected to mark consults as routine or urgent, and they can always call the nurses to clarify their orders, Sauls added.

Problems with utilizatio­n management have been known to Georgia correction­s officials since a state audit of inmate health care a decade ago. The audit cited a “growing backlog of requests pending review by UM staff nurses as well as an increasing number of approved requests (appointmen­ts) that have yet to occur.”

In response, officials noted that a physician had been hired to assist with the process and changes in standard operating procedures for the unit had been proposed.

B ut the documents obtained by the AJC show that the backlog remains both a problem and a subject of controvers­y within Georgia’s correction­al healthcare com- munity.

In an email sent to prison medical directors and other correction­al healt h care employees in March, Lewis reported that the number of consults “in queue” continues to surpass 3,000 “at any time.”

“All UM staff are working very hard to process these as quickly as possible and I have asked for your help via conference calls and several previous emails,” she wrote.

Lewis went on to say that consults should only be ordered when needed and appropriat­e.

“AS OF TOMORROW, FRIDAY MARCH 17, I DO NOT WANT TO SEE ANOTHER CONSULT ENTERED THAT D OES N OT APPLY,” she wrote.

More recently, the backlog has become cause for alarm in the operating room at Augusta State Medical Prison, where many of the procedures would be performed.

In late October, the facility’s perioperat­ive manager, Leah Anderson, wrote Dr. Billy Nichols, Georgia Correction­al HealthCare’s statewide medical director, to warn that she was suddenly seeing an “influx of approvals” from as long ago as July. Because of the facility’s own scheduling backlog, the new approvals wouldn’t get immediate attention, she wrote.

“Everyone is booked out for months already so some of these patients are now waiting up to six to seven months for their procedures,” she wrote. “Could this be communicat­ed to Dr. Lewis?”

After Nichols replied that he could offer extended overtime to help with the backlog, Anderson wrote that additional overtime wouldn’t do any good.

“There is no extra room on our schedule,” she wrote. “The only other alternativ­e is to cancel clinic and do procedures all day on their blocked days. This, however, causes clinic appointmen­ts to backlog, and then there is the risk of not enough bed space here. We are being routed more than we can keep scheduled in a timely manner.”

 ??  ?? Robert Carey Seymour
Robert Carey Seymour
 ?? CONTRIBUTE­D ?? Georgia Correction­al HealthCare at Augusta University provides medical services to more than 60 Georgia Department of Correction facilities across the state.
CONTRIBUTE­D Georgia Correction­al HealthCare at Augusta University provides medical services to more than 60 Georgia Department of Correction facilities across the state.
 ??  ?? Dr. Billy Nichols
Dr. Billy Nichols

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