The Boston Globe

State cuts ties with controvers­ial prison health care company

- Adam Piore can be reached at adam.piore@globe.com.

demanding the company respond to accusation­s that it was putting profits before prisoners.

wellpath declined a request for comment on friday. And vitalcore health strategies ceo viola Riggin declined a request for an interview. in a statement, she suggested her company would do a better job.

“our mission is to prioritize the dignity and health of all under custodial care by delivering the highest standards of quality medical and behavioral health care, guided by evidence-based and trauma-informed best practices that result in positive clinical experience­s for incarcerat­ed patients,” she wrote. “we share the same goals as the Doc to provide quality patient care, and we will demonstrat­e our passion for this work in our daily services.”

for now, some of wellpath’s critics seemed inclined to give their replacemen­t the benefit of the doubt.

“This new contractor selection reflects the healey administra­tion’s commitment to improve health care for people in state custody,” warren said in a statement. “i’ll continue to monitor the performanc­e of this new provider to ensure accountabi­lity.”

but some prisoner rights advocates were less enthusiast­ic.

“we hope that vitalcore can fill some of the critical gaps that we have seen under wellpath, including delays in care, difficulty accessing off-site specialist­s, and chronic understaff­ing,” said Michael horrell, director of the healthcare and Disability Project at Prisoners’ legal services of Massachuse­tts. “but as long as we continue providing health care behind prison walls separate from integrated systems of care in the broader community, we will likely continue to see poor health outcomes for our aging incarcerat­ed population.”

Marc stern, an expert on prison health care and a professor at the University of washington school of Public health, said wellpath and vitalcore are “more alike than they are different.”

“They’re all for-profits, which means their primary obligation is to shareholde­rs,” said stern, a correction­al physician, whose former posts include regional medical director for the new York state Department of correction­s, and medical director for the washington state Department of correction­s. “That doesn’t necessaril­y mean that they don’t care about patients, but they have an obligation to their shareholde­rs.”

wellpath’s tenure was marred by controvers­y. in november 2020, after documentin­g problems at prisons around the state, the state’s Us attorney and the Us Department of Justice’s civil Rights Division accused the Department of correction and wellpath of exposing prisoners experienci­ng a mental health crisis “to conditions that harm them or place them at serious risk of harm.”

Reports from disability and prisoner advocates followed. in one survey of inmates in Massachuse­tts, 79 percent of respondent­s said they had a medical condition ignored by the staff and 80 percent complained of delayed care. in March, the Disability law center issued a report highlighti­ng problems at bridgewate­r state hospital, the Department of correction’s mental health hospital. Patients there, it said, experience­d routine violence, were forced to breathe air contaminat­ed with mold, and were illegally subjected to forced injections as a form of restraint.

whether the quality of care improves under the new company will depend both on how the contract is written and the level of commitment those tapped to lead vitalcore’s efforts in Massachuse­tts feel toward the prisoners under their care, stern said. Though data is limited, studies suggest that the amount of money allocated by states to pay for prison health care is less than would be paid out by Medicaid, “which is not the cadillac of health care by any means,” said stern. The profits taken by private contractor­s further reduce the pie.

vitalcore, which has approximat­ely 2,200 employees and annual revenues of about $300 million, also has a troubled record.

in 2021, Disability Rights Mississipp­i filed a federal lawsuit against vitalcore, the Department of correction­s and its commission­er, burl cain, on behalf of 31 incarcerat­ed men and women in the state’s prisons alleging they had been denied treatment, medication, and medical equipment

Polly Tribble, executive director of Disability Rights Mississipp­i, said some patients were denied needed psychiatri­c medication­s and cited the case of a prisoner with an amputation who was denied care when the stump of his amputated leg became infected and he could no longer use his prosthetic leg.

A separate Delaware lawsuit filed by the American civil liberties Union alleges that the state’s former health services provider, centene, hired unlicensed individual­s to serve as nurses and deliberate­ly understaff­ed the system to increase the profitabil­ity of its contract with the state. it accuses vitalcore, which took over, of failing to fix those problems.

“we acknowledg­e that we have gone into two states with pending litigation and are assisting them mitigating those issues,” Riggin said in a statement to the Globe.

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