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CorrectCare
30 Years After Estelle v.
Gamble: A Legal Retrospective
By William J. Rold, JD, CCHP-A
“It is but just that the public
be required to care for the prisoner, who cannot, by reason of
the deprivation of his liberty, care for himself.” — Spicer
v. Williamson1
As we focus on Estelle v.
Gamble,2 30 years after the U.S. Supreme Court held that
prisoners had a constitutional right to health care, it is
important to remember how we got there. To do so, we return to
rural North Carolina in 1926.
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References |
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further reading, see the references for the court cases
and other material cited in this article. |
The Wounding of Peter Camel
Duplin County Sheriff Williamson’s deputy wounded Peter
Camel when he returned Mr. Camel’s fire while arresting him for
armed robbery 80 years ago. The local doctor told the sheriff
that Mr. Camel’s injuries required hospitalization and surgery
beyond his skills. The sheriff took Mr. Camel to Dr. Spicer, a
surgeon in the next county. According to the decision, Sheriff
Williamson said to Dr. Spicer about Mr. Camel: “He is a human
being. He is in my charge .... [D]o the best you can to save
him.”
After successful surgery, Dr.
Spicer sent Sheriff Williamson a bill, which the sheriff
presented for payment to the Duplin County Board of
Commissioners. The board refused payment, saying that it had not
authorized the sheriff to remove the prisoner for care in
another county or to incur these expenses. Dr. Spicer sued the
sheriff, who impleaded the Board of Commissioners as a third
party defendant, arguing that the bill was Duplin County’s
responsibility.
These three parties (each with
its own attorney) took this dispute to the North Carolina
Supreme Court, resulting in the language quoted above. This
early decision made three points: (1) it was Sheriff
Williamson’s duty to arrange for Mr. Camel’s medical care; (2)
Dr. Spicer was entitled to be paid; and (3) the public (i.e.,
the county) had to pay.
This decision set the stage (and
the often highly charged philosophical debate) for everything
that has followed: the scope of the duty (Sheriff Williamson
took rather extraordinary measures at that time); the
“deservingness” of the patient (Mr. Camel had shot a deputy and
was facing the death penalty); and the power of the courts
(forcing Duplin County to pay after the board had voted no).
Spicer v. Williamson
resonated in other early cases. The Supreme Court of Indiana
wrote: “We cannot believe that the law intended, where a man was
in jail and in need of medical services ... that the county
would not be liable for the services thus rendered by a
physician under the employ of the jailer having the prisoner in
charge.”3
Fifty years later, these
decisions on the common law duties of sheriffs would converge
with the obligation of government under the Eighth Amendment to
the U.S. Constitution, as expressed in Estelle v. Gamble.
The Eighth Amendment
The antecedents of the law’s prohibition of excessive
punishment date from the time of the Magna Carta, signed by King
John at the point of a sword.4 Under the rule of Edward I,
however, misdemeanors were still punishable by whipping, by
mutilation or by removal of a hand or an ear; felonies, by
decapitation. Punishment for treason was particularly harsh, and
included hanging, castration and disembowelment.5
In light of this history, the
drafters of the American Bill of Rights sought in 1791 to
prohibit “cruel and unusual punishment.” Early applications of
the Eighth Amendment interpreted it to forbid torture or wanton
infliction of suffering, but the courts rarely interfered with
prison administration. In 1871, for example, the Virginia
Supreme Court of Appeals wrote: “[the prisoner] is for the time
being a slave, in a condition of penal servitude to the State,
and subject to such laws and regulations as the State may choose
to prescribe.”6
The Eighth Amendment would lay
largely dormant for a century. Indeed, as late as 1963, the
Supreme Court of Delaware upheld the use of lashes as
punishment, since they were not at the time of William and Mary
considered to be “unnecessarily cruel and bordering on outright
torture.”7
Historically, the correctional
system in the United States has been protected from public
scrutiny. Prisons were built far from population centers, and
courts adopted a “hands off” doctrine regarding their
administration.8 Early cases in the 1970s, however, revealed
horrendous medical conditions in which inmates were used without
supervision to perform medical care on their fellows, including
pulling teeth, suturing and surgery. Dramatic instances were
illustrated in which prisoners died, neglected, covered in
maggots and lying in their own filth.9
J.W. Gamble and the Prison
Farm
J.W. Gamble was working on a Texas prison farm when a bail
of hay fell and injured his back. Mr. Gamble sued the chief
prison doctor, the warden and W.J. Estelle, director of the
state department of corrections, for lack of adequate medical
treatment, for denying him a work excuse and for punishing him
for refusing to work when medically unfit. The U.S. District
Court dismissed the case for failure to state a claim under the
Eighth Amendment, and the case came before the Supreme Court.
By this time, the Supreme Court
had before it the common law precedents from Spicer and other
state courts, statutory authority in 22 states for the same
proposition, development of parallel Eighth Amendment
jurisprudence by the lower federal courts and the standards of
numerous organizations, including the U.S. Department of
Justice, the National Sheriffs’ Association and the United
Nations.
It also had its own precedents
under the Eighth Amendment that prohibited “torture or a
lingering death”10 and the “unnecessary and wanton infliction of
pain,”11 and that recognized the “evolving standards of decency
that mark the progress of a maturing society.”12
It found that denial of medical
care to the incarcerated, could, at worst, result in a
“lingering death” and, in less serious cases, cause “pain and
suffering which no one suggests would serve any penological
purpose.”
The court developed the standard
“deliberate indifference to serious medical needs” to define the
Eighth Amendment obligation to provide health care under the
Constitution. It has remained largely unchanged for the last 30
years.
Interestingly, Mr. Gamble lost
his case. In the three months after his injury, he was seen 17
times by various medical personnel. His complaints were grounded
in malpractice, not deliberate indifference. This underscores
that the standard of liability under the Eighth Amendment is
relatively narrow. The amendment does not render prison
officials or staff liable in federal cases for malpractice or
accidents, nor does it resolve professional disputes about the
best choice of treatment. It does, however, protect three basic
rights.
Estelle’s Three Basic
Rights
In the hundreds of cases following Estelle, three
basic rights have emerged: the right to access to care, the
right to care that is ordered and the right to a professional
medical judgment.13 The failure of correctional officials to honor
these rights has resulted in protracted litigation, the awarding
of damages and attorneys’ fees, and injunctions regarding the
delivery of health care services.
The right to access to
care—emergency and routine, as well as specialists and hospitals
when needed—is fundamental. When access is denied or delayed,
the health staff does not know which patients need immediate
attention and which need care that can wait. “A well-monitored
and well-run access system is the best way to protect prisoners
from unnecessary harm and suffering and, concomitantly, to
protect prison officials from liability for denying access to
needed medical care.”14
Generally, courts assume that
care would not have been ordered if it were not needed. Thus,
once a health care professional orders treatment for a serious
condition, the courts will protect, as a matter of
constitutional law, the patient’s right to receive that
treatment without undue delay. The easiest way for an
institution to lose a lawsuit is to fail to provide
inmate-patients with the care that its own staff has ordered.
The adjudication of
constitutional claims is not the business of second guessing
health care professionals. In enforcing the right to a
professional medical judgment, the courts will not determine
which of two equally efficacious treatment modalities should be
chosen. Rather, they seek to “ensure that decisions concerning
the nature and timing of medical care are made by medical
personnel, using equipment designed for medical use, in
locations conducive to medical functions, and for reasons that
are purely medical.”15
While the constitutional standard
does not require that an express intent to inflict pain be shown
(Wilson v . Seiter),16 it does include an inquiry into the
defendants’ state of mind for a “subjective” showing of
“deliberate indifference.” It is not enough that the defendant
should have known or understood the danger to the inmate. The
defendant must know of and disregard a substantial risk (Farmer
v. Brennan).17 Such knowledge, however, can be inferred from
the surrounding facts where the failure to respond to a clear
risk is reckless.
‘Serious Medical Needs’
The Constitution requires that correctional officials
provide medical care only for “serious medical needs.”
Generally, a medical need is serious if it “has been diagnosed
by a physician as mandating treatment or ... is so obvious that
even a lay person would easily recognize the necessity for a
doctor’s attention.”18 Conditions are also considered serious if
they “cause pain, discomfort, or threat to good health” (Dean
v. Coughlin).19 A condition need not be life-threatening to be
deemed serious, and many treatment plans that are labeled
“elective” nevertheless are deemed serious within the meaning of
Estelle.
In general, courts consider three
factors in determining whether correctional officials are being
deliberately indifferent to serious medical needs: (1)
amenability of the condition to treatment; (2) consequences to
the patient if treatment does not occur; and (3) likelihood of a
favorable outcome. Within this mix, the court also may consider
the anticipated length of the patient’s incarceration. It is one
thing to decline provision of dentures or an artificial limb to
an inmate with a three-day jail sentence. It is quite another to
withhold such adjuncts to a patient serving 20 years to life.20
The Impact of Managed Care
Estelle was decided before the advent of modern
notions of HMOs, managed care and “contracting out” for medical
services. The impact of these developments would reach the
Supreme Court in 1988. Again, North Carolina was center stage.
Quincy West was an inmate whose
Achilles tendon was repaired by Dr. Atkins, an orthopedic
surgeon under contract with the state department of corrections.
Mr. West’s lawsuit claiming that Dr. Atkins’ care was so
deficient as to constitute deliberate indifference was dismissed
by the lower federal courts because Dr. Atkins was independent
contractor, not a state employee.
West v. Atkins was of
considerably greater moment than the Achilles tendon job that
prompted the case or the quality of Dr. Atkins’ care: If
corrections could avoid Estelle liability simply by
“contracting out,” the body of law developed since Estelle
was gravely at risk.
The Supreme Court ruled that Dr.
Atkins could be sued under the Eighth Amendment.21 Two important
principles emerge from West and its progeny. First,
private contractors to state and local governments who provide
services to prisoners are “state actors” for purposes of the
Eighth Amendment. Second, the governments that hire them also
remain liable for failing to provide constitutionally adequate
care.
Conclusion
“No serious student of American correctional history can
deny that litigation has provided the impetus for reform of
medical practice in prisons and jails” (Nathan, 1985).22 As
resources become increasingly scarce and government officials
are constantly faced with doing more with less, it can be taken
as some comfort that the courts remain steadfast as a last
resort for a safety net for prisoner patients and for their
providers.
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About the author:
William J. Rold, JD, CCHP-A, is an
attorney specializing in correctional health care law, policy
and ethics, and is based in New York City; he represents the
American Bar Association on the NCCHC board.
References
[This article first appeared
in the Summer 2006 issue of CorrectCare.]
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