August T. Vogel appeals from a declaratory judgment allowing State Penitentiary officials to require Vogel to submit to diabetes monitoring of his blood sugar count and, if ordered by a physician, to forcibly administer food, insulin and other medications to Vogel to prevent deterioration of his health or premature death. We affirm.
Vogel is a 64-year-old penitentiary inmate with a release date of 2016 from his 90-year sentence for first degree murder. He was diagnosed with diabetes mellitus in 1982 and, by 1992, was regularly taking insulin on his own, with monitoring by the penitentiary nurses. In January 1993, the Parole Board granted Vogel an education release to attend Bismarck State College, and he was transferred to the Missouri River Correctional Center (MRCC), a minimum security facility, while he attended school. Under penitentiary rules, inmates can be placed at the MRCC if they are on work release, education release, or within two years of their release from the penitentiary. Vogel was also permitted to work at the Radisson Inn for practical experience to fulfill an educational requirement.
After completing his college coursework in May 1994, Vogel continued working at the Radisson Inn pending Parole Board review. In September, the Parole Board denied Vo-gel work release, and he was not given a parole date within the next two years. He was returned to the penitentiary on September 12,1994 to continue serving his sentence.
The day after his return to the penitentiary, Vogel would not eat or take his insulin. Warden Timothy Schuetzle moved Vogel to the infirmary for observation, and informed him that if his health deteriorated to a dangerous condition, Vogel would be forcibly injected with insulin. Vogel requested and received a grievance hearing.
At the hearing, Vogel expressed his anger at being moved back to the penitentiary. When asked if a compromise could be reached, Vogel said he would resume eating and taking medication for his diabetes if a letter of apology were sent to his employer at the Radisson Inn explaining his absence, if he were returned to the MRCC, if he got his job back, and if he received $1,000 for “punitive” damages. Schuetzle contacted Vogel’s employer for him, but denied the other requests, explaining to Vogel why they could not be granted. In an effort to placate Vo-gel, Schuetzle also offered to help him prepare a parole plan to present to the Parole Board in two years. Vogel refused. His grievance was denied.
Vogel was committed twice, in September and October 1994, to the Jamestown State Hospital for mental evaluation. The State Hospital concluded Vogel was competent and not suicidal. The treating psychiatrist reported Vogel “is a very stubborn, angry man who because of his life sentence ... has very little to lose and thus has asserted his control by refusing to eat at times and by refusing to take the insulin for his diabetes.” Although he began eating again, Vogel continues to refuse to take his insulin.
Schuetzle brought this declaratory action to determine whether Vogel, as an inmate, could refuse medical care and, if so, whether his refusal waived his Eighth Amendment right to be free from cruel and unusual punishment. At the trial, Vogel testified that he refused to take insulin in September because he believed he was being harmed by taking too much insulin. The warden, medical director, and doctor for the penitentiary also testified. The doctor testified that, based on Vogel’s varying blood sugar levels, Vogel was not controlling his diabetes through nonmedi-einal alternatives. The doctor opined that Vogel’s refusal to take insulin would increase his risk of heart attack, diabetic coma, kidney failure, eye problems, pain and numbness, and premature death at some point in the future. The medical director testified that an untreated diabetic’s possible future need for cardiac bypass surgery and renal dialysis would be “extremely costly” to the penitentiary.
The trial court found a “serious medical need” for Vogel to continue with proper medication for his diabetes and concluded that
The court therefore ruled that Schuetzle could require Vogel to submit to monitoring of his blood sugar count and could administer food, insulin, or other medications ordered by a physician if necessary to prevent deterioration of his health or premature death. The court also ruled that the state would not be liable for any deterioration of Vogel’s condition that occurred as a result of his voluntary refusal to eat or take medication for his diabetic condition.
On appeal, Vogel asserts that, as a competent prison inmate, he has an absolute right to refuse medical treatment regardless of his reasons for doing so. We disagree.
We first explain what is not present in this case. We are not faced with an individual in a persistent vegetative state who can be kept alive only by extraordinary means, or one who is in the last stages of a terminal illness.
Compare, e.g., Matter of Quinlan,
A competent person has a constitutionally protected liberty interest to refuse unwanted medical treatment.
Cruzan v. Director, Missouri Dept. of Health,
Ignoring the most relevant state interest here, Vogel would have us analyze this case apart from the prison setting where it arises. In a non-prison setting, the state interests that are generally identified as countervailing (but often subordinate) to the scope of a patient’s autonomy include preserving life, preventing suicide, maintaining the integrity of the medical profession, and protecting innocent third persons.
See Thor,
Courts cannot condone a prisoner’s manipulation of his medical circumstances to the detriment of a state’s interest in prison order, security, and discipline.
See Thor,
The reasons behind this patient’s refusal resemble those of a prisoner in
Myers,
[T]he defendant’s refusal of treatment had “little to do with his disease, the nature or effects of the dialysis treatment, or the personal ramifications of continuing such treatment for the remainder of his life.” His refusal was also unrelated to any religious objection to the treatments. Nor did the defendant wish to die. Rather, the court found that “Myers’ refusal to take dialysis constitute^] a form of protest against his placement in a' medium,' as opposed to a minimum, security prison.” As found by the court, this protest stemmed from the defendant’s belief that continued hemodialysis weakened him and reduced his ability to defend himself against other inmates.
Myers,
[T]he State’s interest in upholding orderly prison administration tips the balance in favor of authorizing treatment without consent. Our evaluation of this interest takes account of the threat posed to prison order, security, and discipline by a failure to prevent the death of an inmate who attempts to manipulate his placement within the prison system by refusing lifesaving treatment. Consequently, on the facts of this case, it is clear that the Superior Court judge correctly concluded that State interests override the defendant’s refusal of life-saving treatment.
Vogel essentially argues, by inference, that the United States Supreme Court’s decision in
Harper,
First, the Court limited its holding “to the category of antipsychotic drugs.”
Harper,
[Prisoner] contends that the State, under the mandate of the Due Process Clause, may not override his choice to refuse anti-psychotic drugs unless he has been found to be incompetent, and then only if the factfinder makes a substituted judgment that he, if competent, would consent to drug treatment. We disagree. The extent of a prisoner’s right under the Clause to avoid the unwanted administration of antipsychotic drugs must be defined in the context of the inmate’s confinement. The Policy under review requires the State to establish, by a medical finding, that a mental disorder exists which is likely to cause harm if not treated.
Harper,
In a decision after
Harper,
the Supreme Court of California in
Thor,
We are not unmindful of the difficulties involved in maintaining an orderly and secure penal institution; and our holding does not imply any attenuation of the deference accorded the experience and expertise of administrative officials in such matters .... In another case, or in this case if a change of circumstances warrant, we do not preclude prison authorities from establishing the need to override an inmate’s choice to decline medical intervention_
A custodial environment is uniquely susceptible to the catalytic effect of disruptive conduct; and courts will not interfere with reasonable measures required to forestall such untoward consequences....
Thor,
Vogel argues the state must show, by clear and convincing evidence, that its rationale for forcing medication upon him serves a compel
In
Harper,
the Court adhered to its ruling in
Turner v. Safley,
The trial court found that Vogel’s original September 1994 refusal to eat or take insulin was an attempt to manipulate the system and an act of blackmail against prison officials, that Vogel would have resumed eating and taking his insulin medication if his demands had been met, that his current refusal to take insulin is a result of anger and defiance for not being housed at the MRCC and allowed to work at the Radis-son Inn, and that Vogel failed to show he was receiving too much insulin. Under NDRCivP 52(a), those findings are not clearly erroneous. 3
Vogel made several documented demands to prison officials, including a request for “punitive” damages, as conditions to end his refusal to eat or to take medication. In keeping with penological considerations, Schuetzle made a placating counterproposal that Vogel rejected. According to his medical chart, on September 21, 1994, Vogel told his attending doctor he would continue on his hunger strike “unless the administration reverses itself.” Schuetzle testified that he did not want the penitentiary to “be put in a position where the inmate believes they can blackmail the staff at the penitentiary with their health, and this is what I believe Mr. Vogel is doing. ‘Send me back to the MRCC. Give me work release back or I will not eat’. I think that puts us at risk at the institution.” The evidence of Vogel’s blatant attempt to manipulate his placement within the prison system is overwhelming.
Although Vogel testified that he was being overmedicated, there was no expert testimony to support his private opinion. The prison doctor testified that Vogel’s attempt to control his diabetes without medication would not work. The doctor also testified about the harm that Vogel could incur if he continued to refuse his treatment for diabetes. The doctor testified the effect of the disease on the vascular system can result in gangrene of the lower extremities, progressive heart failure, heart attack, double vision, renal failure, and a coma. According to the doctor, merely because Vogel thinks he is healthy now does not mean the physical changes leading to these problems “are not ongoing at this time.”
Vogel argues that his treatment refusal cannot viably blackmail prison officials if it does not effectively gain an advantage. However, the trial court found Vogel contin
This might be a closely balanced case if it was only a contest of wills between Vogel and Schuetzle. But there is more here. Aside from Vogel’s attempt to manipulate the system, Vogel asserted that, if he would change his mind in the future, when damage caused by his refusal to take diabetes medication had become substantial, the state would have an Eighth Amendment obligation to provide him with the then required medical care.
See generally Ennis v. Dasovick,
We conclude the requirement that Vogel take diabetes medication against his will is reasonably related to legitimate penological interests. The trial court correctly ruled that prison officials could require Vogel to submit to diabetes monitoring and, if ordered by a physician, forcibly administer to Vogel food, insulin and other medications. The other arguments made by the parties do not affect our decision. The declaratory judgment is affirmed.
Notes
. In
Zant v. Prevatte,
. Nor do the federal and state statutes relied on by Vogel give him an absolute right to refuse medical treatment regardless of penological concerns. See, e.g., Omnibus Budget Reconciliation Act of 1990, 42 U.S.C. § 1395cc(f)(l); NDCC Chapters 23-06.4 and 23-06.5; NDCC 25-01.2-15 and 25-03.1-02(11). None of these statutes specifically apply to Vogel in his current situation. Moreover, to the extent these statutes demonstrate the general importance accorded by federal and state lawmakers to a person’s interest in personal autonomy and self-determination, we have already recognized in this opinion that a person’s interest in self-determination is a "fundamentally commanding one.”
. Vogel complains about the trial court allowing counsel for the state to draft the findings of fact, conclusions of law, and order in this case. Apparently, the trial court issued no memorandum opinion and telephoned both counsel that he would be ruling for the state, and directing the state to prepare an order. We prefer that the court state in its own words the rationale and basis for its decision because merely informing the parties who wins and directing the prevailing party to prepare the necessary findings and conclusions may fail to foster the appearance of faimess and impartiality in our courts.
See Schmidkunz v. Schmidkunz,
