Lead Opinion
This is a certiorari action to our court brought by the sheriff of Polk County seeking to reverse a district court decision denying the sheriffs application to compel jail inmate Jerrell Brown to submit to kidney dialysis treatment. We must decide whether the district court correctly found that Brown’s liberty interest to refuse such treatment outweighs the State’s countervailing interests to preserve life, prevent suicide, protect the interests of innocent third parties, maintain the ethical integrity of the medical profession, and maintain prison security, order, and disei-pline. We find that the State’s interests must prevail. We therefore sustain the writ.
I. Scope of Review.
The nature of the issues in this certiorari proceeding determines our review. See Hancock v. City Council,
II. Facts and Proceedings.
The police arrested Brown on December 16, 1998, on charges of possession of a controlled substance with intent to deliver and failure to possess a drug tax stamp. At the time material to these proceedings, Brown was a Polk County jail inmate.
On February 24, 1999, the Polk County Sheriff filed an application in the district court asking the court to issue an order regarding emergency treatment for Brown. Apparently, Brown was refusing to continue with kidney dialysis treatment, which he had been receiving for about a year. The district court immediately ordered an evaluation of Brown’s mental competency.
The next day, the district court held a hearing on the sheriffs petition. Iowa Lutheran Hospital intervened. Apparently, Brown had been receiving kidney dialysis treatments at this hospital.
The following facts were developed during the hearing. Brown is thirty-four years old. He has a medical condition known as nephrotic syndrome arising from
Brown has been receiving kidney dialysis (hemodialysis) treatments three days a week. As mentioned, he has been receiving such treatments for about a year. Each treatment lasts about three and one-half hours. An arterial venous fistula has been permanently inserted in his arm. Needles are inserted into this device each time Brown receives the kidney treatment. While receiving the treatment, Brown must sit for the three and one-half hours while the dialysis machine cleans his blood of toxins. Medical testimony revealed that the procedure is not painful and presents no serious side effects. Medical testimony also revealed that unless Brown receives the treatment, he would die within one week. Cardiac arrest would most likely cause his death. Continuing the treatment would allow Brown to live as long as twenty years.
According to the jail medical director, Dr. Roy Overton III, in the event Brown went into cardiac arrest, jail personnel would transport him to an emergency room at a local hospital. Without a do-not-resuscitate order or a living will, hospital personnel would take whatever measures necessary to save Brown’s life. These measures would include intubating Brown, placing him on a respirator, inserting a catheter, and performing emergency dialysis. These medical procedures are more invasive than the regular dialysis treatment Brown has been receiving.
The jail medical director testified that he would honor a do-not-resuscitate order. He also testified that there are no Polk County jail inmates who have such orders in place. There was no evidence suggesting Brown has a do-not-resuscitate order or a living will in place.
Marvin Wilson is the chief jailer. He testified that in his twenty-three years at the jail, he has never known an inmate to have a do-not-resuscitate order. Wilson also testified that, even were there such an order, sheriffs deputies would still transport Brown to a hospital in case of a serious medical condition. Wilson pointed out that the jail is not a health care facility and sheriffs deputies would not honor do-not-resuscitate orders. According to Wilson, he would leave that decision to medical personnel.
Wilson testified that the sheriff has a duty to care for the safety, security, custody, and control of jail inmates and a duty to provide medical treatment to them, including Brown. Wilson had several concerns were the district court to allow Brown to refuse medical treatment. First, the other 600 inmates would be encouraged to refuse medical treatment as an excuse to get out of jail. Second, such an order would require jail personnel to exert more eyes-on supervision. This additional supervision would be required even if Brown were to execute a do-not-resuscitate order. Wilson indicated this level of supervision would be more than would be required for an inmate with a contagious medical condition or with a psychotic disorder.
Although Brown did not testify, he did state that he was 'refusing medical treatment “at this time.” This was in response to a question from the judge conducting the hearing.
Dr. Michael Taylor, a psychiatrist, evaluated Brown the day before the hearing. Taylor testified Brown was competent, appeared to be of at least average intelligence, and understood the risks of his discontinuing the treatment. Taylor offered that Brown “knew more about the risks of stopping hemodialysis than some physicians in this state.” According to Taylor, Brown said that spending any further time in any correctional facility was unacceptable and that he was going to stop his dialysis treatment “whether he was looking at another month, or another year, or another five years” in incarceration.
Taylor’s report concerning the evaluation is in evidence. From it we learn that Brown expressed no particular concern
At the end of the evidence, the district court ruled from the bench. After making detailed findings of fact, the court, in a very thoughtful and thorough ruling, concluded that Brown’s liberty interests under the Fourteenth Amendment were superior to the State’s claim of reasonable governmental interests in compelling the dialysis treatment. The court overruled the sheriffs application for an order compelling the medical treatment.
The sheriff filed a petition for writ of certiorari with this court and requested an order requiring Brown to immediately undergo kidney dialysis treatment until we could hear the matter. Additionally, the sheriff requested that following the hearing we make the order permanent.
We granted the petition. In addition, we authorized the sheriff to compel Brown to submit to kidney dialysis treatment and, if ordered by a physician, forcibly administer such treatment to maintain Brown’s life until we could address the merits of his case.
Following oral arguments, the sheriff notified us that the district court had released Brown from jail. The court had released Brown based on the State’s motion to dismiss the charges against Brown prompted by a district court ruling sustaining Brown’s motion to suppress. In a written motion, the sheriff has asked us to decide this case, even though the case is now moot.
III. Mootness.
Ordinarily, we do not consider cases that are moot. Shannon v. Hansen,
Having considered all four factors, we agree with the sheriff that we should decide this case. Clearly, the issue is one of public importance, and our decision would give guidance to penal authorities should they be faced with similar situations in the future. We are particularly persuaded by the sheriffs contention that there is a likelihood his office may have to deal with Brown in the future and again face his refusal of lifesaving medical treatment. In support of his contention, the sheriff points out that Brown has been incarcerated in the Polk County jail five times: in 1992, 1995, 1996, and twice in 1998. Given this past history, we must agree with the sheriff.
Moreover, we think this is a case capable of repetition, yet evading appellate re
IV. The Issue.
The issue is whether competent persons, while being held as pretrial detainees, have a constitutional right to refuse unwanted medical treatment. The district court held Brown had a liberty interest to refuse such treatment under the Due Process Clause of the Fourteenth Amendment to the Federal Constitution. We therefore limit our analysis to the Federal Constitution.
Y. The Law Generally.
The Due Process Clause of the Fourteenth Amendment prohibits a state from “depriving] any person of life, liberty, or property, without due process of law.” U.S. Const, amend. XIV (emphasis added). In Cruzan v. Director, Missouri Department of Health, the United States Supreme Court inferred from its prior decisions that “a competent person has a constitutionally protected liberty interest in refusing unwanted medical treatment.”
While recognizing that .many state courts have held that a right to refuse treatment is encompassed by a generalized right of privacy, the Court declined, to analyze the issue in terms of a privacy right. Instead, the Court believed the issue “is more properly analyzed in terms of a Fourteenth Amendment liberty interest.” Cruzan,
In Cruzan, the Court focused on a state’s interest in the protection and preservation of life. Id. at 280,
VI. Analysis.
A. Preserving life. While courts recognize a state’s interests in life are strong, such interests standing alone will usually not preclude a competent person from declining life-sustaining medical treatment. Thor,
because the life that the state is seeking to protect in such a situation is the life of the same person who has competently decided to forego the medical intervention; it is not some other actual or potential life that cannot adequately protect itself.
Id.
It is also commonly understood that as the quality of life diminishes because of physical deterioration, a state’s interest in preserving life correspondingly reduces. Id. As one court put it:
The interest of the State in prolonging a life must be reconciled with the interest of an individual to reject the traumatic cost' of that prolongation. There is a substantial distinction in the State’s insistence that human life be saved where the affliction is curable, as opposed to the State interest where, as here, the issue is not whether but when, for how long, and at what cost to the individual that life may be briefly extended.
Superintendent of Belchertoum v. Saikew-icz,
Here, the State’s interests in the preservation of life is implicated. While Brown’s kidney disease is not curable, his condition is not terminal in the sense that he is going to die soon regardless of the treatment he receives. On the contrary, continued dialysis will permit Brown to live an otherwise normal and healthy life for perhaps twenty years. Thus, compelling Brown to submit to dialysis “does not. involve a situation where ‘heavy physical and emotional burdens’ would be imposed ‘to effect a brief and uncertain delay in the natural process of death.’ ” Myers,
But, as we have pointed out, this interest does not alone control Brown’s right to refuse treatment. We must also factor into our balancing process the magnitude of the invasion brought about by dialysis. See, e.g., Lane v. Candura,
B.. Preventing suicide. Closely related to the interest of preserving life is the State’s • interest in preventing suicide. There is a distinction
between a person suffering from a serious life-threatening disease or debilitating injury’who rejects medical intervention that only prolongs but never cures the affliction and an individual who deliberately sets in motion a course of events aimed at his or her own demise and attempts to enlist the assistance of others.
Thor,
In re Caulk is a good illustration of a state’s interest in preventing suicide.
This .is not a situation where an individual facing death from a terminal illness, chooses to avoid extraordinary and heroic measures to prolong his life, albeit for a short duration. Rather, the defendant has set the death-producing agent in motion with the specific intent' of causing his own death. Thus, in these circumstances, the State’s interest in preserving life and preventing suicide dominates.
Id. at 97 (citations omitted).
In oral argument, counsel for the sheriff conceded suicide is not implicated here because medical testimony indicated Brown would die from natural causes if he refused treatment. Brown agrees and cites Myers as authority. See Myers, 399
C. Protecting the interests of innocent third parties. This interest arises “when the refusal of medical treatment endangers the public health or implicates the emotional or financial welfare of the patient’s minor child.” Singletary v. Costello,
The record reflects that Brown has children. There is no indication of the children’s ages, but given Brown’s age, we may assume they are minors. Sadly, Brown told Taylor that he had no particular concern about the potential impact his death would have upon his children. According to Taylor, Brown stated his own father “passed” when Brown was in his early twenties and that he “got over it and went on with his life.” Although, as Brown argues, as a jail inmate he would be unable to provide financially for his dependents, we can still consider the emotional impact upon them. Additionally, we cannot presume that Brown would never be in a position to provide financial support to them. Although not controlling, we must still weigh this factor in the balance, and we do so in favor of compelling treatment.
D. Maintaining the ethical integrity of the medical profession. As one court points out, “[a]dvances in the medical science have given doctors greater control over the time and nature of death.” Superintendent of Belchertovm,
[W]e should not use extraordinary means of prolonging life or its semblance when, after careful consideration, consultation and the application of the most well conceived therapy it becomes apparent that there is no hope for the recovery of the patient. Recovery should not be defined simply as the ability to remain alive; it should mean life without intolerable suffering.
Id. at 424 (quoting Lewis, Machine, Medicine and Its Relation to the Fatally III, 206 J.A.M.A. 387 (1968)).
The same considerations we gave respecting Brown’s positive prognosis in our discussion of the preservation of life apply here. Assuming Brown would voluntarily submit to dialysis treatment, there is no doubt that health care practitioners would recommend such treatment. Medical testimony in this case was consistent with this recommendation. Preserving the ethical integrity of that recommendation also favors our decision to compel treatment.
E. Maintaining prison security, order, and discipline.
1. Brown’s status as a pretrial detainee. Before addressing the final state countervailing interest, we consider what impact Brown’s status as a pretrial detainee has on the issue. We start with the proposition that the state may constitutionally incarcerate a person charged with a crime but yet not convicted to ensure the person’s presence at trial. Bell v. Wolfish,
The presumption that a pretrial detainee is innocent “has no application to a determination of the rights of’ such a person “during confinement before his trial has ever begun.” Id. at 533,
Jail authorities also have “legitimate interests that stem from [their] need to manage the facility in which the individual is detained.” Id. For example, they “must be able to take steps to maintain security and order” at the jail. Id. Restrictions and conditions reasonably related to these interests do not constitute punishment. Id. at 540,
In determining whether these restrictions and conditions are reasonably related to the interest in maintaining security and order, the Supreme Court has said that
such considerations are peculiarly within the province and professional expertise of corrections officials, and, in the absence of substantial evidence in the record to indicate that the officials have exaggerated their response to these considerations, courts should ordinarily defer to their expert judgment in such matters.
Pell v. Procunier,
Several other general principles bear on the question whether jail restrictions and conditions violate a pretrial detainee’s rights under the Due Process Clause of the Federal Constitution. Such persons retain at least those rights that convicted persons enjoy. Bell,
Such constitutional rights, however, are subject to restrictions and limitations justified by the considerations underlying the penal system. Id. at 545-46,
Similar to the punishment issue, the proper standard for determining the constitutional validity of such restrictions and limitations is whether they are “reasonably related to legitimate penological interests.” Washington v. Harper,
Maintaining security and preserving internal order and discipline “are essential goals that may require limitation or retraction of the retained constitutional rights of both convicted prisoners and pretrial detainees.” Bell,
Because problems that arise in the day-to-day operation of a penal institution are not easy to solve, courts should accord administrators of such institutions “wide-ranging deference in the adoption of and execution of policies and practices that in their judgment are needed to preserve internal order and discipline and to maintain institutional security.” Id. Thus, similar to the punishment issue, these
considerations are peculiarly within the province and professional expertise of corrections officials, and, in the absence of substantial evidence in the record to indicate that the officials have exaggerated their response to these considerations, courts should ordinarily defer to their expert judgment in such matters.
Id. at 548,
Additionally, correction officials may curtail constitutional rights whenever “in the exercise of their informed discretion, [they] conclude” that an inmate’s conduct may likely disrupt “[the penal institution’s] order or stability, or otherwise interfere with the legitimate penological objectives of the” institutional environment. Jones v. North Carolina Prisoners’ Union,
Prison life, and relations between the inmates themselves and between the inmates and prison officials or staff, contain the ever-present potential for violent confrontation and conflagration. Responsible officials must be permitted to take reasonable steps to forestall such a threat, and they must be permitted to act before the time when they can compile a dossier on the eve of a riot.
Id. at 132-33,
2. The merits on the issue of maintaining prison security, order, and discipline. Given the broad discretion accorded correctional authorities, we can easily say there is a reasonable relationship between the jail’s restriction on Brown’s claimed liberty interest to refuse treatment and the jail’s overwhelming interest in maintaining jail security, order, and discipline. We cannot take lightly the chief jailer’s concerns that other inmates would “copycat” Brown’s actions as an excuse to get out of jail. The chief jailer, of course, need not wait until that happens. He can take reasonable steps to prevent such actions from ever occurring. And we fail to see any substantial evidence from which we can conclude the chief jailer’s application to the district court was an exaggerated response to Brown’s refusal. Given the chief jailer’s twenty-three years of experience at the jail, we should not second-guess his judgment call. Rather, we should defer to that judgment.
Other courts have used the same rationale when inmates have gone on hunger strikes. In most of these cases, the inmate’s main aim was to gain attention from correction officials and sometimes
It is true Brown made no demands on the sheriff in return for Brown’s accepting dialysis treatment. We can, however, reasonably infer this manipulative motive from Brown’s statement to Taylor that spending any further time in any correctional facility was unacceptable and that he was going to stop his dialysis treatment. In that same discussion, Brown stated he was going to stop his dialysis treatment until March 4, the date of his pretrial conference. The fair implication from this statement is that by then Brown’s condition might be serious enough to convince authorities to let him out of jail.
There was also evidence that Brown’s refusal of medical treatment would disrupt day-to-day management of the jail. The chief jailer testified that Brown’s refusal of medical treatment would require more staff supervision for Brown than for other inmates suffering, for example, from a contagious disease or mental illness. The staff would have to watch Brown closely for signs that he was going into cardiac arrest so they could rush him to the hospital. To the chief jailer, this was in his language, a “big, big” concern in light of his duty to provide medical care to every inmate. This is the kind of day-to-day jail management problem that demands we give deference to the chief jailer’s response to solve that problem.
For all of these' reasons, we find that compelling Brown to accept dialysis treatment is reasonably related to legitimate penological interests.
VII. Conclusion.
In balancing Brown’s diminished liberty interest to refuse treatment against the State’s countervailing interests in preserving life, preventing suicide, protecting the interests of innocent third parties, maintaining the ethical integrity in the medical profession, and maintaining prison security, order, and discipline, we conclude the State’s interests must prevail. We therefore have no choice but to sustain the writ.
WRIT SUSTAINED.
Dissenting Opinion
(dissenting).
I respectfully dissent. I join Justice Cady’s dissent with these additional comments. The majority’s application of the legal principles that are appropriate to this issue seriously diminishes, if not eliminates, to a pretrial detainee the liberty interest established by the United States Constitution. Under the majority’s analysis, it would be extremely unlikely that any exercise of the liberty interest to refuse unwanted medical treatment would be upheld over a jailer’s objection. This is because a jailer could always conjure up a fear that a prisoner’s act of exercising his constitutional liberty interest would have a “fallout” effect on other prisoners. This
The liberty interest guaranteed by the United States Constitution is found in the Fourteenth Amendment that provides that no State shall “deprive any person of life, liberty, or property, without due process of law.” U.S. Const, amend. XIV. The principle that a competent person has a constitutionally protected liberty interest in refusing unwanted medical treatment has been firmly established by the United States Supreme Court. See Cruzan v. Director, Missouri Dep’t of Health,
This notion of bodily integrity has been embodied in the requirement that informed consent is generally required for medical treatment. Justice Cardozo, while on the Court of Appeals of New York, aptly described this doctrine: “Every human being of adult years and sound mind has a right to determine what shall be done with his own body; and a surgeon who performs an operation without his patient’s consent commits an assault, for which he is liable in damages.” Schloendorjf v. Society of New York Hospital,211 N.Y. 125 , 129-130,105 N.E. 92 , 93 (1914) [overruled in part on other grounds by Bing v. Thun-ig,2 N.Y.2d 656 ,163 N.Y.S.2d 3 ,143 N.E.2d 3 (1957) ]. The informed consent doctrine has become firmly entrenched in American tort law. See Keeton, Dobbs, Keeton, & Owen, supra, § 32, pp. 189-192; F. Rozovsky, Consent to Treatment, A Practical Guide 1-98 (2d ed.1990).
The logical corollary of the doctrine of informed consent is that the patient generally possesses the right not to consent, that is, to refuse treatment.
Cruzan,
The Supreme Court has also held that the forcible injection of medication into a nonconsenting person’s body represents a substantial interference with that person’s liberty. Washington v. Harper,
As a pretrial detainee, Brown is confined, both at the jail and at the hospital, where he is forced to receive unwanted medical treatment. The additional form of confinement inherent in the imposition of unwanted medical treatment was addressed by Justice O’Connor in stating:
The State’s imposition of medical treatment on an unwilling competent adult necessarily involves some form of restraint and intrusion. A seriously ill or dying patient whose wishes are not honored may feel a captive of the machinery required for life-sustaining measures or other medical interventions. Such forced treatment may burden that individual’s liberty interest as much as any state coercion.
In upholding this liberty interest, the Supreme Court has recognized that it is derived from a long history. It has been protected as a constitutional right, a common law right to privacy, a common law right to informed consent and the right to self-determination. See id. at 269-73,
Regarding the conflict between individual constitutional rights and the interests of the state, the Supreme Court quoted with approval language from the New Jersey Supreme Court. It said:
On balance, the right to. self-determination ordinarily outweighs any counter-prevailing state interests, and competent persons generally are permitted to refuse medical treatment, even at the risk of death. Most of the cases that have held otherwise, unless they involved the interest in protecting innocent third parties, have concerned the patient’s competency to make a rational arid considered choice.
Id. at 273,
In the case at bar, there is no question that Brown is competent to make a rational and considered choice.
In Bell v. Wolfish, the Supreme Court examined the constitutional rights of pretrial detainees — those persons who have been charged with a crime but who have not yet been tried on the charge. Bell v. Wolfish,
The Supreme Court further stated:
A fortiori, pretrial detainees, who have not been convicted of any crimes, retain .at least those constitutional rights that we have held are enjóyéd by convicted prisoners.
Bell,
Brown has not been convicted of any crime; he is detained and incarcerated to ensure his appearance for trial solely on the legal principle that there is reasonable cause to believe he has committed a crime. Gerstein v. Pugh,
Prisoners possess a significant liberty interest in avoiding the unwanted administration of antipsychotic drugs under the Due Process Clause of the Fourteenth Amendment. Washington,
Although the evidence suggests that physical pain is minimal iri kidney dialysis treatment it can hardly be said, under these circumstances of unwanted treatment by Brown, that mental and emotional pain is not present. And, given that likelihood, has Brown been the recipient of punishment by the state;- in furthering its own interests?'
PUNISHMENT. In criminal law. Any pain, penalty, suffering, or confinement inflicted upon a person by the authority of the law and the judgment and sentence of a court, for some crime or offense committed by him, or for his omission of a duty enjoined by law.
Black’s Law Dictionary 1398 (4th ed.1951).
The Supreme Court in Bell considered a series of restrictions imposed on pretrial detainees, who were housed with convicted felons, in determining their liberty interests under the Fourteenth Amendment. These regulations by the jail officials included double bunking; restrictions on receipt by mail of food, personal items and books; and submission to strip searches, room searches, and body cavity searches. These measures were all found to be rationally related to the legitimate security concerns of the jail officials. As such, they did not constitute punishment of pretrial detainees that deprived them of their liberty interest without due process of law under the Constitution.
The same cannot be said of the State’s decision imposed upon Brown. Though establishing legal maxims, the Bell case is inapposite to Brown’s situation. The security problems addressed in Bell came from parties outside the jail who directed their actions to the pretrial detainees in jail. Brown’s desire to exercise his liberty right is passive, independent, and inherently nonthreatening. Contrasted to the physical restrictions addressed in Bell, the imposition of the State’s interests on Brown’s liberty interest is vastly more invasive. Brown has been denied the very essence of self-determination. He has been the recipient of punishment by the State including the physical pain of unwanted medical treatment and the mental and emotional pain underlying a decision of this magnitude.
In the instant case, the majority has fundamentally undervalued the liberty interest of the Fourteenth Amendment. At the same time it has recognized the State’s interests as supreme even though they are totally unsupported by the evidence. Regarding the state’s interest in preserving life, the Supreme Court quoted with approval the New York Court of Appeals’ statement that “ ‘no person or court should substitute its judgment as to what would be an acceptable quality of life for another.’ ” Cruzan,
As to the interests of innocent third parties, there is no evidence on this matter. With respect to maintaining the integrity of the medical profession there is no evidence to indicate any effect. Finally, on the issue of maintaining prison security, order and discipline, the record is devoid of any evidence of danger or impediment to these concerns emanating from Brown’s expressed decision to exercise his constitutionally protected liberty interest. The majority’s belief that this is a weighty factor is supported not by facts or citable incidents of problems created by Brown, but only by the chief jailer’s concern about some residual effect causing “some fallout with some other inmates.” A never explained piece of nebulous evidence, at best.
Constitutional rights should not be shunted aside by such a frail reed of supposition.
I believe that the trial court carefully analyzed the law, properly assessed the factual circumstances presented and correctly decided this case. I would annul the writ of certiorari.
McGIVERIN, C.J., and CADY, JJ., join this dissent.
Dissenting Opinion
(dissenting).
I respectfully dissent. I agree with the legal principles set forth in the majority opinion, but disagree with the application of these principles to the facts of the case.
A competent person has a constitutional right to refuse unwanted medical treatment. Cruzan v. Director, Missouri Dep’t of Health,
In considering the State’s interest, it must be recognized that Brown’s constitutional right to refuse unwanted medical treatment would, most assuredly, prevail over the competing interests of the State if he were not incarcerated in the county jail. This is because most of the interests of government identified by the majority have been considered, directly or indirectly, in recognizing the existence of the underlying constitutional right to refuse medical treatment. See Cruzan,
Instead, what really drives this case is the State’s interests in maintaining jail security, order, and discipline. While these are legitimate interests, I do not believe the State showed they would be sufficiently compromised to support the denial of a recognized constitutional right.
A prison regulation which impinges on a constitutional right of a prisoner is valid if the regulation “is reasonably related to legitimate penological interests.” Turner v. Safley,
The State offered two penological intér-ests to support its mandate that Brown receive dialysis. First, it claimed other inmates would attempt to follow Brown’s actions as a way to be released from jail. Second, it claimed more staff would be needed to supervise Brown once his physical condition began to deteriorate. Giving deference to the jailer’s expertise and experience, the majority concludes these interests support the denial of Brown’s constitutional right.
Although manipulative behavior and supervision are legitimate general penological concerns, they are not in this case. We should not accept the expressed concerns of the State without subjecting them to some scrutiny that reveals a reasonable necessity for the particular regulation.
The first claim is an exaggerated response by the jailer. There is no suggestion that authorities would release Brown from his pretrial detention if his decision to refuse medical treatment was honored. To the contrary, the evidence indicated Brown would simply be transported to a hospital once his medical condition became critical. Not only would any manipulative
The second concern is also exaggerated in this case. Although Brown may require some additional supervision for a limited period of time if he discontinued his dialysis, it is unrealistic to claim this minimal imposition on prison staff would undermine prison security, order, or discipline any more than the current supervision Brown receives.
Prisoners are not divested of their constitutional rights once they become imprisoned. Williams v. State,
McGIVERIN, C.J., and SNELL, JJ., join this dissent.
