Decision-Making for Hospitalized Incarcerated Patients Lacking Decisional Capacity

Author:

Batbold Sarah1,Duke Jennifer D.2,Riggan Kirsten A.3,DeMartino Erin S.23

Affiliation:

1. Mayo Clinic Alix School of Medicine, Rochester, Minnesota

2. Division of Pulmonary and Critical Care Medicine, Mayo Clinic, Rochester, Minnesota

3. Biomedical Ethics Research Program, Department of Quantitative Health Sciences, Mayo Clinic, Rochester, Minnesota

Abstract

ImportanceIncarcerated patients admitted to the hospital face threats to their rights to privacy and self-determination in medical decision-making. Little is known about medical decision-making processes for hospitalized incarcerated persons who lack decisional capacity.ObjectiveTo characterize the prevalence of incapacity among hospitalized incarcerated patients and describe the decision-making processes, including who served as surrogate decision-makers, involvement of prison employees in medical decisions, and ethical concerns emerging from the patients’ care.Design, Setting, and ParticipantsRetrospective descriptive and qualitative study of medical records for all patients admitted from prison for at least 24 hours between January 1, 1999, and September 1, 2019, at a large Midwestern academic medical center. Data analysis was performed from March 15, 2021, to December 14, 2022.Main Outcomes and MeasuresPrevalence of prison-to-hospital admissions for patients with a loss of capacity and characteristics of medical decision-making.ResultsDuring the 20-year study period, 462 patients from the prison were admitted to the hospital, totaling 967 unique admissions. Of these, 131 admissions (14%) involved patients with a loss of capacity and 43 admissions (4%, representing 34 unique patients) required surrogate decision-making. Ten of these patients had advance directives. Surrogate decision-makers often faced decisions about end-of-life care (n = 17) or procedural consent (n = 23). A family member was identified as surrogate decision-maker in 23 admissions. In 6 cases with a kindred surrogate, additional consent was requested from a prison employee. In total, prison employees were documented as being present during or participating in major medical decisions for half of the admissions. Five themes emerged from thematic analysis: uncertainty and misinformation about patient rights and the role of prison employees in medical decision-making with respect to these two themes, privacy violations, deference to prison officials, and estrangement from family and friends outside of the prison.Conclusions and RelevanceIn this first in-depth description, to date, of decision-making practices for hospitalized incarcerated patients lacking decisional capacity, admissions of these patients generated uncertainty about their rights, sometimes infringing on patients’ privacy and autonomy. Clinicians will encounter incarcerated patients in both hospital and clinic settings and should receive education on how to support ethically and legally sound decision-making practices for this medically vulnerable population.

Publisher

American Medical Association (AMA)

Subject

Internal Medicine

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1. Behind Bars at the Bedside;CHEST;2024-09

2. Medicaid for Medical-Correctional Care: Time to Manage What is Reimbursed;Journal of General Internal Medicine;2024-06-03

3. Cooperation Between Medical and Correctional Stakeholders;JAMA Internal Medicine;2024-05-01

4. Best practice guidelines for evaluating patients in custody in the emergency department;Journal of the American College of Emergency Physicians Open;2024-03-22

5. Incapacitated and Incarcerated—Double Barriers to Care;JAMA Internal Medicine;2024-01-01

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