UPDATE: this is the most current contact info for Corizon and their records office, as of June 18, 2013:
Corizon Health
950 W. Elliot Road, Ste. 220
Tempe, AZ 85284
480-897-9515 x 2513
Madeline Carney, Medical Records
480-897-9608 fax
Original Post: March 5, 2013
Given how disastrous for sick prisoners the Wexford takeover was in July 2012, please make sure that if you have a loved one in prison both you and they know their health care rights. As mentioned earlier, I'm not real optimistic they'll be any improvement over Wexford, so steel yourselves, now, to have to fight for them. I'm not an attorney, but I can direct you to some who can offer professional help if you have resources. If you don't, I can help you help yourselves, I hope. I'll try, anyway, so contact me if you need to access some support or concrete assistance navigating the AZ DOC, or if you have major human rights violations in custody to report - I'm tracking that kind of thing:
Peggy Plews / PO Box 20494 / PHX, AZ 85036
480-580-6807
As for what to arm yourselves and imprisoned loved ones with:
1. First, read and send prisoners my October 23 Health Care letter (sorry, it needs to be updated with Corizon's info will do that ASAP), here:
2. Along with that letter, they'll need my AZ Prison Watch Newsletter (Valentine's edition). This one talks about filing grievances to advance prisoner health care claims:
3. This is the AZ DOC Policies page where the most recent policies are posted. Click on the links for DO 1101: Access to Health Care, and DO 802: Grievance Procedure, and whatever else seems to pertain, given your situation, and send them to your loved one in AZ DOC whether they need them now or not. Download these as PDF files, then - unless you're dealing with vision issues - print 2 pages to a side for economy.
4. Here are the chapters to the Columbia University Jailhouse Lawyers Manual that prisoners will especially need as well, if fighting for health care rights. They'll need other chapoters as their battle advances, so keep the TOC link handy.
5. For families and advocates, the people who are at the top of the Parsons v Ryan class action suit filed by the ACLU are AZ DOC Director Charles Ryan and DOC Health Services Division Director Richard Pratt. Their email addys are: cryan@azcorrections.gov and rpratt@azcorrections.gov. Those are the guys whose desks the buck is supposed to stop at, anyway.
The AZ DOC street address, for registered, return-receipt mail (better than certified, I'm told), is 1601 W. Jefferson St. PHX, AZ 85007.
The AZ DOC street address, for registered, return-receipt mail (better than certified, I'm told), is 1601 W. Jefferson St. PHX, AZ 85007.
6. Read this post about the suicide of Tony Lester, and watch the video there before you write to the DOC. We need to all work together to change the system, not just get your loved one an exception to the rule of indifference. Make sure you have the right witnesses in the cc line of your email/ letter. This is the most current list of whom to include, as rule of thumb:
Margaret Plews, at arizonaprisonwatch@gmail.com,
Darrell Hill at the AZ ACLU dhill@acluaz.org,
AZ House Minority Leader Chad Campbell chcampbell@azleg.gov
your own legislator (find them here),
and, if it involves a prisoner with a mental illness or developmental disability, include Jennifer Alewelt from the AZ Center for Disability Law jalewelt@azdisabilitylaw.org
7. Here's the link to the ACLU of AZ's website - ask them for printed complaint forms to send into the prisons. The may not be able to intervene in your particular case, but they need to be kept informed about current health care struggles at the AZ DOC while they slog it out in court. Here's the text of the actual class action suit, too, Parsons v Ryan. It's full of useful descriptors and legal references for articulating prisoners' medical and mental health care complaints.
I can't stress enough how important it will be that your loved ones in prison are themselves studying this material, filling out grievances properly, and requesting things from the prison library like the packet for filing Section 19983 Civil Rights claims in federal court (see DO 902 Attachments A & B). That applies even if you expect to hire legal help for them - they need to do their part right, or no one can help much.
Oh by the way, none of the above respects the usual chain of command the AZ DOC wants you to follow, except for the process the prisoners themselves must comply with to "exhaust administrative remedies". This strategy for families to advocate is designed to empower you to access the decision-makers at the AZ DOC with regards to your loved one's needs. Keep things in writing and keep making the top people responsible - they will try to dismiss, appease, and stall you, and make you think your correspondence does no good. As long as the prisoner you love is doing their part, don't believe the DOC - just keep making sure that paper trail of neglect and gross indifference leads right back to Ryan and Pratt.
Finally, if you can download, print and mail the NLG Jailhouse Lawyer's Handbook in to prisoners, please do. It's taking the National Lawyer's Guild forever to send these to them for the $2 promised.
Let
me know how things are going out there, so I can keep the pressure on
the right people over the most pressing issues and give families and
prisoners the most current and useful information.
Good Luck -
Peggy Plews
------from the AZ Department of Corrections' Health Services Division Website----------
Inmate Health Care at the Arizona Department of Corrections is provided by Corizon (www.corizonhealth.com).
Corizon clinicians maintain open dialogue with our patients about their health. If a patient has questions or a health concern, they may submit a Health Needs Request (HNR) Form, which will be addressed in a timely manner. We also encourage our patients to have open conversation with loved ones regarding health conditions and behaviors that can optimize their health.
In an effort to respond to inquiries from loved ones regarding our patients, we provide "Constituent Services" to address questions or concerns. Family members or friends may:
- Ask questions about Corizon's medical policies
- Report a patient's serious health-related conditions
- Request patient-specific health information
Each patient's health information is protected by law, so in order for any information to be released, the patient must have a current, signed release form on file giving Corizon permission to share health information with the family member or friend. With the appropriate documentation, Corizon strives to respond to inquiries within one business day.
For Health Information Access, please use the following contact information:
PHONE:1-855-276-5416
E-MAIL: InmateHealthInquiry@corizonhealth.com
To contact the ADC Health Services Contract Monitoring Bureau, please call 602-364-2100.
E-MAIL: InmateHealthInquiry@corizonhealth.com
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