CoreCivic Faces Protests and Lawsuits for Denying Diabetic Prisoners Proper Treatment
CoreCivic Faces Protests and Lawsuits for Denying Diabetic Prisoners Proper Treatment
Protests at the headquarters of for-profit prison corporation CoreCivic are drawing attention to the company’s practice of denying diabetics timely treatment.Three inmates have sued CoreCivic over its medical practices. Plaintiffs say they’re provided sub-standard healthcare. Insulin shots are administered without routine, complicating detainees’ ability to regulate their blood sugar.A class-action suit filed earlier in the year alleges that inmates at Trousdale Turner Connectional Center sometimes have to wait ‘hours’ after meals to receive insulin shots. Attorneys claim the center is chronically understaffed and suffers from frequent lockdowns.The Hartsville Vidette reports that former Trousdale inmate Thomas Leach filed a suit in 2016; another was launched this year, after a detainee named Jonathon Salada died from diabetes-related complications.Interviews with inmates portray conditions for diabetics as dismal. The Tennessean interviewed Douglas Dodson, who suffers from the condition and is currently housed at Trousdale.Dodson says lockdowns can last a very long time. The last one went on for ‘weeks.’ Inmates were kept in their cells and denied access to the ‘chow hall.’ Consequently, meals were delivered to individual cells.For diabetics like Dodson, meals were supposed to come with an insulin shot. But he claims not to have received an injection for several nights, endangering his health and risking his life.“For the past 2 ½ weeks we have been on lock down, and it has been several evenings that we have not been called to the clinic to get our insulin,” Dodson wrote in a prisoner complaint form which is featuring in one of the suits against Trousdale.“I know my insulin s keeping me alive and I really need it everyday. This has went on long enough here at this facility!” Dodson said.
CoreCivic operates 65 prisons around the United States, as well as several immigration detention centers. Pictured is a women's facility in New Mexico. Image via CoreCivic/Flickr. (CCA-BY-2.0)
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At Tennessee’s largest prison, diabetic inmates say they are denied insulin to 'maximize profits'Protests put spotlight on diabetic lawsuits against CoreCivic
About Ryan J. Farrick
Ryan Farrick is a freelance writer and small business advertising consultant based out of mid-Michigan. Passionate about international politics and world affairs, he’s an avid traveler with a keen interest in the connections between South Asia and the United States. Ryan studied neuroscience and has spent the last several years working as an operations manager in transportation logistics.