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Sally pays for Sally’s medical care. She has a proven income and will not qualify for assistance. She will be required to pay.“Bill” was just paroled from prison (from his second term.) He walked away from the work-release program (a violation of his parole) and went to live with his mother – supporting himself by burglary.
“Sally” who is married to a truck driver (who makes more than the median salary) took her three kids to live with Bill. She’s a Certified Nursing Assistant, but she used up all her sick leave and vacation to be with Bill.
Sally and Bill decided to have a party – they drove to another county (Bill driving, another violation of the terms of his parole) and bought alcohol (another violation of the terms of his parole) and then ran off the road and hit a tree.
Both of them were hospitalized.
Who should pay for their medical care?
Bill will most certainly be placed back in custody of the State. He will, however, qualify for State assistance (for the private hospital expenses) because he has no recordable income.
Once he’s taken back into custody his healthcare issues are another thing:
A recent parolee and type II diabetic named Frederick (who did not give his last name) described how, when he was sent to prison in California a few years ago on a theft charge, he could walk and see as well as any other person. By the time the state released him a few months ago, he was legally blind and confined to a wheelchair.
He described to a crowd of about 40 people how prison staff neglected his medical condition until a 1999 stroke left him severely disabled. For instance, even though he is diabetic and has special dietary needs, he was served the same food as the other inmates. In addition, he added, “many of us diabetics weren’t even getting our daily insulin injections in a timely manner.”
With over 157,000 inmates in 33 facilities and an annual budget of nearly $5 billion, the California Department of Corrections operates the largest prison system in the nation. Yet critics charge that sick or injured inmates receive substandard and intermittent care. “California is the model for what a large prison system can do for a very ill prison population,” said Judy Greenspan, the event’s coordinator and chair of the HIV/Hepatitis C in Prisons Committee of California Prison Focus. "I think that it falls flat on its face.
sfgate.com/cgi-bin/article.cgi?file=/gate/archive/2002/03/11/healthwatch.DTL