Orlando Sentinel (Sunday)

Hepatitis C ruling could add millions to health costs in Florida prisons

- By Ana Ceballos News Service of Florida

TALLAHASSE­E — The state may have to pay millions of dollars more in treatment costs for inmates infected with hepatitis C, following a federal judge’s ruling that said prison officials have been “deliberate­ly indifferen­t” in caring for thousands of inmates infected with the virus.

The ruling could potentiall­y cost the Florida Department of Correction­s as much $20 million more than what it is already paying to treat inmates with the virus, said Senate Criminal and Civil Justice Appropriat­ions Chairman Jeff Brandes, who recently got a preliminar­y briefing from the department

While the state was already mandated by the court to treat inmates with Hepatitis C, the ruling by U.S. District Judge Mark Walker expanded the number of inmates who will receive care because it includes those who are at the early stages of the disease.

The order will affect roughly 20,000 to 40,000 prisoners, according to the Florida Justice Institute, which sued the state in 2017 after inmates said they had been denied proper hepatitis C treatment.

“As a result of this order, thousands of people will be treated for hepatitis C and will no longer be at risk for cancer, liver disease and on the issue. premature death,” said Dante P. Trevisani, executive director of the Florida Justice Institute.

The state admitted in court that it failed to provide inmates with proper hepatitis C treatment, something the state knew to be a “serious medical need,” in part because of a lack of funding, according to the ruling issued Thursday.

“FDC (The Florida Department of Correction­s) has come a long way,” Walker wrote. “But FDC’s improvemen­t does not mean that it is no longer being deliberate­ly indifferen­t to HCV-infected inmates, nor does it mean that there is no risk of such deliberate indifferen­ce reoccurrin­g in the future.”

The decision is expected to further strain the correction­s system budget, and with two weeks left in the legislativ­e session, time is running out to negotiate more money for the department.

“The question is, is it better to put a little bit more money in this year and begin to chip away at that?” Brandes, R-St. Petersburg, said. “There’s a lot of different ways we could do this.”

The costs to taxpayers remains unclear, but the agency’s latest budget request submitted before the final court order asked for $36.9 million to treat inmates infected with Hepatitis C. That did not include money for inmates in the earlier stages of the disease.

Newspapers in English

Newspapers from United States