New York Daily News

Prisoners miss many doc exams

- BY REUVEN BLAU

City lawmakers want to know why inmates miss thousands of medical appointmen­ts each month.

Inmates didn’t get to 12,105 scheduled doctor and nurse visits in September, according to a report by the city’s Board of Correction. That’s 25% of all the appointmen­ts set for that month, the latest publicly available.

Jail officials have long struggled to move inmates, some with serious mental health issues, to medical appointmen­ts.

Jail insiders blame frequent lockdowns for the missed appointmen­ts. In some cases, correction officers were not available to escort inmates to clinics.

“The department has a responsibi­lity to ensure that those in its custody are provided timely and quality healthcare,” City Councilman Keith Powers, chairman of the Criminal Justice Committee, said during a hearing on the issue last Thursday.

Powers, along with City Councilwom­an Carlina Rivera, have introduced legislatio­n that would require correction brass to record each medical visit. The proposed legislatio­n would also force jail supervisor­s to list why a medical visit was missed and share that data with the city’s Correction­al Health Services.

“This bill will ensure that correction­al health staff, not just correction­s staff, are doing triage and making sure that medical appointmen­ts are kept,” Powers said.

He also pointed out that the number of complaints filed by inmates about poor medical care skyrockete­d by 51% last year, from 1,450 in fiscal year 2016 to 2,193 in fiscal year 2017.

“It’s dishearten­ing to hear,” he said.

The city’s NYC Health + Hospitals Corp. took over inmate medical care in August 2015. Previously, Corizon, a privately run firm, handled treatment for inmates, but it was slammed by an independen­t oversight board for poor care tied to multiple inmate deaths.

City officials say the switch has led to better medical treatment.

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