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Coleman Special Masters Report on Adequacy of Inpatient Mental Health Care 5-30-14 PDF

354 Pages·2014·1.47 MB·English
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Preview Coleman Special Masters Report on Adequacy of Inpatient Mental Health Care 5-30-14

Case 2:90-cv-00520-LKK-DAD Document 5156 Filed 05/30/14 Page 1 of 354 IN THE UNITED STATES DISTRICT COURT FOR THE EASTERN DISTRICT OF CALIFORNIA RALPH COLEMAN, et al., Plaintiffs, v. No. CIV S-90-0250 LKK DAD PC EDMUND G. BROWN, JR., et al., Defendants SPECIAL MASTER’S REPORT ON ADEQUACY OF INPATIENT MENTAL HEALTH CARE FOR INMATES OF THE CALIFORNIA DEPARTMENT OF CORRECTIONS AND REHABILITATION Matthew A. Lopes, Jr., Esq. Special Master PANNONE LOPES DEVEREAUX & WEST LLC 317 Iron Horse Way, Suite 301 Providence, RI 02908 (401) 824-5100 Fax: (401) 824-5123 May 30, 2014 0 Case 2:90-cv-00520-LKK-DAD Document 5156 Filed 05/30/14 Page 2 of 354 SPECIAL MASTER’S REPORT ON ADEQUACY OF INPATIENT MENTAL HEALTH CARE FOR INMATES OF THE CALIFORNIA DEPARTMENT OF CORRECTIONS AND REHABILITATION Introduction On April 11, 2013, plaintiffs in this matter moved for enforcement of orders relating to treatment of those Coleman class members who are receiving mental health care at the inpatient level at the six programs that provide treatment for CDCR inmates requiring that level of care. [Motion for Enforcement of Court Orders and Affirmative Relief Related to Inpatient Treatment, Docket No. 4543, filed April 11, 2013]. Among other things, plaintiffs argued that access to, and provision of, care at these programs had reached a “crisis point” due to mismanagement of wait lists and discharges, staffing shortages, excessively restrictive custodial policies and resulting deprivation of care, and lack of basic amenities. Beginning on June 19, 2013, an evidentiary hearing on plaintiffs’ motion took place over the course of three and a half days. Testimony was taken from nine witnesses. On July 11, 2013, plaintiffs’ motion was granted in part and denied in part. [Order, Docket No. 4688]. On August 12, 2013, defendants appealed the July 11, 2013 order to the United States Court of Appeals for the Ninth Circuit, and moved the trial court for a stay pending the appeal. [Motion to Stay, Docket No. 4742]. After duly filed opposition by plaintiffs, the motion to stay pending appeal was denied. [Order, filed September 5, 2013, Docket No. 4784]. As of this writing, defendants’ appeal remains pending. In its July 11, 2013 order, the court directed the Special Master to monitor all six of the inpatient mental health programs for CDCR inmates, and to “report to the court on their adequacy and whether any modifications to defendants’ remedial plan are required to ensure that 1 Case 2:90-cv-00520-LKK-DAD Document 5156 Filed 05/30/14 Page 3 of 354 members of the plaintiff class are receiving adequate inpatient mental health care.” [Order, Docket No. 4688 at 11-12]. From August 2013 through March 2014, members of the Special Master’s staff of clinical experts and monitors toured the six programs and gathered the relevant information which is discussed in detail below.1 Two of the six programs are run exclusively by the California Department of State Hospitals (DSH) and also treat patients who are not CDCR inmates. These programs for CDCR inmates are at Atascadero State Hospital (ASH) and Coalinga State Hospital (CSH). At three of the six programs, clinical services are provided by DSH to only CDCR inmates at locations within CDCR prison facilities. These are the Vacaville Psychiatric Program (VPP), which is within the CDCR prison California Medical Facility (CMF); the Salinas Valley Psychiatric Program (SVPP), which is at the Salinas Valley State Prison (SVSP); and the mental health inpatient program at the California Health Care Facility (CHCF), which also provides inpatient medical care as well as dental care to only CDCR inmates. At the Psychiatric Inpatient Program at the California Institution for Women (CIW PIP), inpatient care is provided for female CDCR inmates exclusively by CDCR. ASH, the CHCF, and CIW PIP are accredited by the Joint Commission; SVPP, VPP and CSH are not. The court ordered the Special Master to report first on the adequacy of staffing levels at the SVPP, and on whether so-called cuff or orientation status, either as designed or implemented at that program unduly interfered with or delayed the provision of necessary care to class members, as well as other matters deemed by the Special Master to require urgent attention by the court. Plaintiffs’ request for additional orders was denied without prejudice, pending the Special Master’s monitoring and reporting. 1 As in prior reports by the Special Master, the experts and monitors on his staff who toured the inpatient programs shall be referred to collectively as “the monitor,” or, as applicable, “the Special Master’s expert.” 2 Case 2:90-cv-00520-LKK-DAD Document 5156 Filed 05/30/14 Page 4 of 354 As ordered, the Special Master’s report and recommendations for orders with respect to SVPP was filed first, on September 24, 2013. Special Master’s Report on the SVPP, Docket No. 4830, filed September 24, 2013. In that report, the Special Master recommended: 1. That the SVPP be directed to fill remaining staffing vacancies and consider modifying its planned staff-to-patient ratio of 1:35. Priority should be given to filling psychiatry, psychology, and social work positions. 2. That the SVPP be directed to increase significantly the amount and quality of individualized and group therapy provided. 3. That the SVPP be directed to reconsider and re-evaluate its use of Orientation Status to automatically require patient cuffing whenever out-of-cell and withhold mental health programming or treatment other than a daily cell-front contact by a member of the interdisciplinary treatment team (IDTT). 4. That the SVPP be directed to eliminate the use of Cuff Status to require automatic cuffing of patients when out-of-cell, overriding of patients’ stage designations, and barring of patients’ access to out-of-cell individual and group treatment. 5. That the SVPP be directed to begin tracking all patient bed assignments, and admit referred and accepted patients as quickly as bed availability permits so that all beds are utilized to the fullest extent possible, and in no event beyond 72 hours following bed assignment and 30 days from the date of the referral. 6. That the SVPP resolve any and all remaining issues with, and obstacles to, providing patients with the full complement of clean clothing, towels, and bed coverings, and make these provisions available to patients on a timely basis according to established schedules. Defendants filed objections to the Special Master’s report on SVPP and moved to strike or modify it in part. Plaintiffs filed a response with a request for additional recommendations and orders. On November 13, 2013, the Coleman court denied defendants’ motion to modify the Special Master’s findings in his SVPP report and adopted them in full, and denied without prejudice plaintiffs’ motion for additional orders. [Order, Docket No. 4925]. Insofar as the Special Master’s recommendations in his SVPP report, the court ruled as follows: 1. In light of defendants’ representations concerning their efforts to recruit and hire staff and improve the quantity and quality of therapy, and the continuation of monitoring 3 Case 2:90-cv-00520-LKK-DAD Document 5156 Filed 05/30/14 Page 5 of 354 SVPP and the other DSH programs, any orders on staffing and the quantity and quality of therapy were deferred pending further reporting and recommendations from the Special Master. 2. CDCR and DSH shall review and re-evaluate the use of orientation and cuff status at SVPP to determine whether these policies as designed and implemented achieve the proper balance between legitimate security needs and access to necessary inpatient mental health care. This shall be carried out under the guidance of the Special Master and his staff, with participation and input from plaintiffs. The Special Master shall report to the court on the results of this review and re-evaluation in the report to be filed on March 31, 2014. In addition, defendants were ordered to report to the court within 15 days whether there was any inmate-patient at SVPP on cuff status without required supporting documentation. 3. Defendants must forthwith begin tracking all patient bed assignments at SVPP, and admit referred and accepted patients to SVPP as quickly as bed availability permits and in no event beyond 72 hours following bed assignment and 30 days from the date of referral (i.e. the date which the completed referral packet is received by DSH by facsimile or overnight mail). With regard to laundry issues, the court noted defendants’ representation that a committee had been formed to inventory and resolve any problems with the program’s supply of clean laundry leaving it to the Special Master to report any failure to solve this problem. The following is the Special Master’s composite report of his findings and conclusions across the six inpatient programs, plus individual reports on each of the six programs. This report was prepared with great effort to present the Special Master’s findings clearly and in the most organized and readable fashion possible. However, the Special Master’s tours of these inpatient programs revealed that they vary widely in their respective policies, practices, and operations in nearly every aspect of inpatient mental health care administration and delivery. From facility to facility, the Special Master found differences, with seemingly no discernible semblance of coordination or consistency among any of the DSH programs, as the reader will see below. Because of this unevenness, thorough and consistent monitoring, and coherent and helpful reporting, on these programs was a challenge. To the extent the reader finds any 4 Case 2:90-cv-00520-LKK-DAD Document 5156 Filed 05/30/14 Page 6 of 354 apparent disconnectedness among the program reports which follow, it is more likely the result of actual differences among these programs than it is the result of gaps in monitoring strategies and practices. In this report, discussion of the programs’ performance in the various examined areas is organized according to the three general categories into which the six programs fall, as described above. Individual dedicated reports on each of the programs are attached as Exhibits A through F, and program-by-program case reviews by the Special Master’s clinical experts are attached as Exhibits G through L. A list of all acronyms appearing in this report is attached at Exhibit M. I. STAFFING A. ASH and CSH As of February 10, 2014, there were 207 Coleman class inpatients at ASH. Psychiatry staffing at ASH was severely low, with a vacancy rate of 61 percent, which was mitigated to a still-low 39 percent with use of contract coverage. The detrimental effect this had on the program’s ability to treat its patients was significant. It led to limited participation of psychiatrists on IDTTs, which in turn limited the efficacy of these teams for patient treatment planning and follow-up, which is particularly important at the inpatient level of care for seriously mentally ill persons. Staff reported that other disciplines attempted to bridge the gap in psychiatry but were crossing into psychiatry’s traditional clinical role, affecting the quality of care provided. Staff also reported a perceived lack of support for psychiatry leadership at ASH in that the lack of overtime pay for supervisors created a disincentive for psychiatrists to seek supervisory posts. As a result, supervisory positions were filled predominantly by non- psychiatrists, placing staff psychiatrists in the position of being, in effect, supervised by nurses, rehabilitation therapists, and psych techs who occupied the supervisory positions. The staff-to- 5 Case 2:90-cv-00520-LKK-DAD Document 5156 Filed 05/30/14 Page 7 of 354 patient ratio in the admission unit at ASH was insufficient, at 1:25. Cognizant of its problems with psychiatry staffing, ASH did seek a site-specific hourly pay increase for psychiatrists, but approval by the California Department of General Services (DGS) had not been given as of the time of the Special Master’s most recent visit to ASH. As of March 18, 2014, 2014, there were 49 Coleman class patients at CSH. Its two psychiatry positions in the program for CDCR inmates had been vacant since the unit opened and remained vacant, but CSH did manage to cover them with contract psychiatrists. Like ASH, CSH covered its psychology positions, albeit with unlicensed psychologists who were supervised by the senior psychologist supervisor. ASH also filled all of its social work positions. CSH filled two-thirds of its social work positions, with unlicensed social workers. CSH filled its rehabilitation therapist positions, while ASH filled only three-quarters of them. Conversely, ASH filled all of its psych tech positions, but CSH had a 17-percent vacancy rate among psych techs. At ASH, staffing levels were adequate in the admissions unit for psychologists, social workers, and rehabilitation therapists. In its intermediate care treatment unit, CSH maintained a ratio of 1:25 for psychiatrists and rehabilitation therapists, and ratio of 1:15 for psychologists and social workers. B. SVPP, VPP, and CHCF At the time of the Special Master’s Report on SVPP, filed on September 24, 2013, staffing was problematic at that program. It remained problematic through the time of the Special Master’s visit to SVPP in March 2014. The program continued to rely on registry/contract staff and second positions held by existing staff to cover core roles, including in some instances both line and supervisory positions being covered by the same staff. The result 6 Case 2:90-cv-00520-LKK-DAD Document 5156 Filed 05/30/14 Page 8 of 354 was over-extension and inability of staff to carry out all of the attendant responsibilities of more than one position. As of March 4, 2014, SVPP housed 224 Coleman class patients. Like ASH, SVPP was understaffed in psychiatry. While it had four of its five psychiatry positions covered, one of these psychiatrists was on extended leave, three were registry staff, and two were on loan from other DSH facilities, for a level of less than optimal stability in this important discipline in an inpatient program. Recruitment efforts were reportedly underway. As of March 14, 2014, there were 406 Coleman class patients housed at VPP. VPP was the only one of the six inpatient programs to have its own established staffing ratios of 1:15 in acute care units and 1:35 in intermediate care units. However, VPP failed to satisfy its own ratios in a number of its units. VPP covered all of its psychiatry positions with a combination of full-time and registry staff, yet it did not satisfy its own program-established staff-to-patient ratios in psychiatry in one acute care unit and three intermediate care units. At the CHCF, the shortage of psychiatrists was so severe as to delay activation of five housing units in the mental health program, with only nine of the 35 psychiatry positions filled, for a 74-percent vacancy rate. In psychology, SVPP filled ten of its 12 positions, but three of the psychologists were on extended leaves, making a total of five or 42 percent of psychology positions functionally vacant. VPP covered all of its 23 psychology positions, but did not satisfy its own staffing ratios in six of its acute care units and two of its intermediate care units. 7 Case 2:90-cv-00520-LKK-DAD Document 5156 Filed 05/30/14 Page 9 of 354 SVPP filled ten of its 12 social work positions, but again, extended staff leaves reduced the number of covered positions to eight, for a 33-percent functional vacancy rate. VPP filled all of its 23 social work positions, but it did not meet its own staffing ratios in three of its acute care units and one of its intermediate care units. SVPP and VPP fared well in staffing rehabilitation therapy positions, with SVPP filling nine of its ten positions, and VPP filling all 23 of its positions. In nursing, SVPP covered 26 of its 36 RN positions, while VPP covered all of its RN positions. At the CHCF, the average daily census of Coleman class members for the month of January 2014 was 279.2 The CHCF struggled with filling its psychology positions, with a 36- percent vacancy rate. It filled 29 of its 35 social work positions, for a 17-percent vacancy rate, but it filled only 21 of its 35 rehabilitation therapy positions. The CHCF did better with staffing its RN positions, with only an eight-percent vacancy rate. C. California Institution for Women Psychiatric Inpatient Program (CIW PIP) As of February 21, 2014, there were 38 Coleman class members housed at the CIW PIP. Staffing levels were adequate to support functions at the CIW PIP, with all psychiatry and psychology positions filled, and three of the four social work positions filled. Of the four recreation therapist positions, three were filled, as were 29 of the 32 psych tech positions. Staff- to-patient ratios for psychiatrists, psychologists and social workers were adequate. 2 Source: Department of State Hospitals Report, Staff Levels for Coleman Patients, January 1, 2014 through January 31, 2014, submitted February 1, 2014. 8 Case 2:90-cv-00520-LKK-DAD Document 5156 Filed 05/30/14 Page 10 of 354 II. TREATMENT AND CLINICAL SERVICES A. ASH and CSH 1. IDTTs Not surprisingly, ASH’s shortage of psychiatrists meant that IDTT meetings were not always conducted with a psychiatrist present, which meant that patients’ treatment plans did not always have the benefit of a psychiatrist’s input. The quality of the treatment team meetings varied across units in terms of clinical and patient-team interactions. Treatment plans were somewhat generic and lacked clarity of treatment goals and/or behavioral therapy-based interventions. However, teams did appear to know their patients and had the relevant patient information at hand. Unlike at other inpatient programs, treatment team meetings at CSH were typically led by psychologists, and the role of psychotropic medications and psychiatry in general were given less emphasis in treatment plans. Conduct of observed IDTT meetings appeared to be more rote than truly responsive to the patient and his needs expressed at the meetings. Treatment plans were not modified in accordance with clinical information being provided by the patient at his own treatment team meeting. 2. Group Therapy Group therapy was the primary treatment modality at ASH, and was occasionally supplemented by some individual therapy. This was problematic because the amount of group therapy was very deficient. In 2011, the average number of provided weekly group hours was 12.94, but in 2013 it had fallen to only 7.23 hours. More concerning was that the average number of group hours actually attended by patients was only 4.6 hours per week, as of the time of the Special Master’s September 2013 visit. Group offerings remained limited at five to eight 9

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FOR INMATES OF THE CALIFORNIA DEPARTMENT OF inpatient mental health programs for CDCR inmates, and to “report to the court on their . staffing at ASH was severely low, with a vacancy rate of 61 percent, which was
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