Skip to content
  • About
  • Contact
  • Contribute
  • Book
  • Careers
  • Podcast
  • Recommended
  • Speaking
KevinMD
  • All
  • Physician
  • Practice
  • Policy
  • Finance
  • Conditions
  • .edu
  • Patient
  • Meds
  • Tech
  • Social
  • Video
  • All
  • Physician
  • Practice
  • Policy
  • Finance
  • Conditions
  • .edu
  • Patient
  • Meds
  • Tech
  • Social
  • Video
    • All
    • Physician
    • Practice
    • Policy
    • Finance
    • Conditions
    • .edu
    • Patient
    • Meds
    • Tech
    • Social
    • Video
    • About
    • Contact
    • Contribute
    • Book
    • Careers
    • Podcast
    • Recommended
    • Speaking
KevinMD
  • All
  • Physician
  • Practice
  • Policy
  • Finance
  • Conditions
  • .edu
  • Patient
  • Meds
  • Tech
  • Social
  • Video
    • All
    • Physician
    • Practice
    • Policy
    • Finance
    • Conditions
    • .edu
    • Patient
    • Meds
    • Tech
    • Social
    • Video
    • About
    • Contact
    • Contribute
    • Book
    • Careers
    • Podcast
    • Recommended
    • Speaking
  • About KevinMD | Kevin Pho, MD
  • Be heard on social media’s leading physician voice
  • Contact Kevin
  • Discounted enhanced author page
  • DMCA Policy
  • Establishing, Managing, and Protecting Your Online Reputation: A Social Media Guide for Physicians and Medical Practices
  • Group vs. individual disability insurance for doctors: pros and cons
  • KevinMD influencer opportunities
  • Opinion and commentary by KevinMD
  • Physician burnout speakers to keynote your conference
  • Physician Coaching by KevinMD
  • Physician keynote speaker: Kevin Pho, MD
  • Physician Speaking by KevinMD: a boutique speakers bureau
  • Primary care physician in Nashua, NH | Kevin Pho, MD
  • Privacy Policy
  • Recommended services by KevinMD
  • Terms of Use Agreement
  • Thank you for subscribing to KevinMD
  • Thank you for upgrading to the KevinMD enhanced author page
  • The biggest mistake doctors make when purchasing disability insurance
  • The doctor’s guide to disability insurance: short-term vs. long-term
  • The KevinMD ToolKit
  • Upgrade to the KevinMD enhanced author page
  • Why own-occupation disability insurance is a must for doctors

We seem reluctant to remember that people incarcerated are exactly that: people

Alexandria Dyer
Conditions
May 26, 2020
Share
Tweet
Share

When I found out that health systems across the country contract with prisons for hospital laundry and other services, the same systems that train medical students like myself, someone dear to me was in prison. Each time I walk into a patient’s room and see fresh linens, when I wear fresh scrubs, I am still flooded with my friend’s calls and letters. Imagery of being surrounded by only concrete. Without access to healthy food or quality care. No connection to the Earth. I recalled how much his time in prison was changing him. Was breaking him. When I see those linens, I remember how many tears I shed after our phone calls.

Introduction

Unpaid labor, slave labor, is older than the United States itself. Nearly 250 years after the first enslaved African was sold on this continent, the U.S. abolished slavery, with a caveat: slavery could not exist except as punishment for a crime. Presumptively, driven by the threat of a decimated economy, prison labor served as a cheap surrogate that allowed for continued exploitation. A surrogate that prevails to this day and weaves health systems in its web of contracts, labor, and illness.

Today, in all federal and most state prisons, people who are able to work are legally required to. Those in prisons are not considered employees, are not required to receive minimum wage, and cannot receive workers compensation if injured on the job. The United States incarcerates the largest percent of its population in the world and furthers the racism of its predecessors, chattel slavery and colonization, by disproportionately criminalizing — then working — people of color.

In my home state of Oregon, hospitals contract with prisons to launder linens, scrubs, and gowns, with average wages between 5 and 47 cents per hour — still a slightly higher wage than states like Texas, where workers are not paid at all. On the backs of these workers lies the billion-dollar industry that is prison enterprises.

Working conditions

Expecting justice from an unjust design, built on devalued and exploited labor, is senseless. And the deep-running injustice of our system is particularly apparent in the state of health and the health care in our prisons.

Incarcerated people are more likely to have chronic health problems including diabetes, hypertension, TB, and HIV, as well as substance use and mental health disorders. Yet, within prisons there is little access to nutritious food, and health care quality varies with significant barriers to access. One barrier being the sheer cost of care, as most prisons require a copay for provider visits. An impossible hurdle, when hard-earned cents may rather be spent on other needs like a box of tampons, which can cost two weeks’ worth of wages alone. This dim picture is compounded by few rights to healthy working conditions. In 2017, incarcerated members of Operation PUSH in Florida organized a strike to end “slave labor” and directly called out “environmental conditions [they] face, like extreme temperatures, mold, contaminated water, and being placed next to toxic sites such as landfills …” These same sentiments echoed across 17 states in the National Prisoners Strike of 2018.

COVID-19, incarcerated

It is clear that the health of some in our community relies upon the harm of others. Each patient visit to a provider wearing prison-laundered scrubs, becomes rooted in the coerced labor and illness that it seeds and exacerbates. In other words, the healing we hold space for with our patients is intricately enmeshed in the illness-provoking labor of those incarcerated. We are complicit in a complex web of contracts that is in direct opposition to the oath we all take.

This tension becomes achingly visible as COVID-19 ravages through our health systems and our prisons. With 86 percent of reporting correctional jurisdictions with confirmed cases, we see an aging prison population with chronic health conditions washing the laundry of infected patients; we see them then struggle to quarantine in prison cells, their bunkmates always less than six feet away. Those with inconsistent access to health care are the same who make face masks and hand sanitizers for doctors and nurses. Amidst growing fear of their own fate in this pandemic, they dig mass graves while, we can imagine, praying theirs won’t be the bodies to fill them. The pandemic has shown just how much health care systems rely on prison labor, and reinforces how little those in prison receive in health care in return.

While health care workers are lauded as heroes with funds raised to ensure our protection, what acknowledgment and care is demonstrated for those whose labor lays the foundation for our own? What protection is there for them, for their essential work? As providers, we continue to exploit an injurious system for our own benefit, both economically to avoid higher labor costs, and medically, through putting those of perceived lower social value to work on these tasks. Heartbreaking signs in the window of a Chicago jail put it starkly, “Help, No Supply” and “Don’t Let Us Die.” This is not justice. This is a human rights crisis.

Calling for change

As a society, we seem reluctant to remember that people incarcerated are exactly that: people. We construct concrete walls and iron cages around them, but they are not separate from us. They are our neighbors, parents, children, siblings, friends. People who are deeply loved. And who deserve to be radically transformed by what we call “justice,” not further harmed by it. We in the field of medicine commit ourselves to improving health, to doing no harm, and to remembering our responsibility to all human beings, not just those in front of us. COVID-19 has only served to further widen our own cracks in that commitment.

We must find ways to mend these cracks. To turn to restorative justice, to divestment, to decarceration to save lives, and transform these legacies of oppression. Bit by bit weaving a world where health isn’t traded for harm, where care is offered over cages, and where justice and health systems are allied in authentically healing us all.

Alexandria Dyer is a medical student.

Image credit: Shutterstock.com

Prev

Opening America: Should we really have to choose between economic revival and human life?

May 26, 2020 Kevin 2
…
Next

Remedy for a sick nation: Curbing hyperpartisanship after the pandemic 

May 26, 2020 Kevin 2
…

Tagged as: Emergency Medicine

< Previous Post
Opening America: Should we really have to choose between economic revival and human life?
Next Post >
Remedy for a sick nation: Curbing hyperpartisanship after the pandemic 

ADVERTISEMENT

Related Posts

  • Advocating for people with disabilities: People First Language

    Leonard Wang
  • Why do people hate Obamacare?

    Julie Rovner
  • Want to improve telehealth? Ask people with disabilities.

    Christina Khou, PhD and Colleen Stiles-Shields, PhD
  • What makes people defy precautions during a pandemic?

    Ashten Duncan, MD
  • People who take opioids are the AIDS patients of today

    Heather Finlay-Morreale, MD
  • A message from a patient to health care workers: Always remember your humanity

    Michele Luckenbaugh

More in Conditions

  • Workplace violence against nurses: a crisis of systemic failure

    Amanda Dean, RN
  • Ignored DNR hospital policy: a family’s tragic end-of-life story

    Amanda Cutshall
  • Health insurance incentives and alternatives to opioids for chronic pain

    Molly Candon, PhD and Daniel Clauw, MD
  • Communicating health to children: a pediatrician’s guide for parents

    Joey Skelton, MD
  • The truth about short-term opioid prescribing and opioid use disorder

    Kayvan Haddadan, MD
  • How spinal cord stimulation offers relief for chronic pain

    Kayvan Haddadan, MD
  • Most Popular

  • Past Week

    • Politics and fear have replaced science in U.S. pain management [PODCAST]

      The Podcast by KevinMD | Podcast
    • Evidence-based medicine vs. clinical judgment: a medical student’s perspective

      Jay Pendyala | Education
    • The controversy over Maintenance of Certification for grandfathered physicians

      Bernard Leo Remakus, MD | Physician
    • How hindsight bias distorts clinical medicine

      Olumuyiwa Bamgbade, MD | Physician
    • When side effects are actually a cry for help with medication costs

      Shuchita Gupta, MD | Physician
    • The hidden math behind physician hiring costs and recruitment

      Timothy Lesaca, MD | Physician
  • Past 6 Months

    • The dangers of vertical integration in health care

      Stephanie Waggel, MD | Policy
    • Why does sex work seem like a more viable path than medicine in 2026?

      Corina Fratila, MD | Physician
    • The 9 laws of health care quality: Why metrics miss the point

      Constantine Ioannou, MD | Physician
    • Politics and fear have replaced science in U.S. pain management [PODCAST]

      The Podcast by KevinMD | Podcast
    • From Singapore to Canada: a blueprint for primary care transformation

      Ivy Oandasan, MD | Policy
    • How board certification fuels the physician shortage crisis

      Brian Hudes, MD | Physician
  • Recent Posts

    • Health care affordability crisis: lessons from the NYC nursing strike

      Marc Henry Estriplet, MD, MPH | Physician
    • How wearable technology is changing the role of physicians

      Jeffrey Junig, MD, PhD | Tech
    • Workplace violence against nurses: a crisis of systemic failure

      Amanda Dean, RN | Conditions
    • Ignored DNR hospital policy: a family’s tragic end-of-life story

      Amanda Cutshall | Conditions
    • Why measuring muscle mass matters more than tracking your weight [PODCAST]

      The Podcast by KevinMD | Podcast
    • Health insurance incentives and alternatives to opioids for chronic pain

      Molly Candon, PhD and Daniel Clauw, MD | Conditions

Subscribe to KevinMD and never miss a story!

Get free updates delivered free to your inbox.


Find jobs at
Careers by KevinMD.com

Search thousands of physician, PA, NP, and CRNA jobs now.

Learn more

View 3 Comments >

Founded in 2004 by Kevin Pho, MD, KevinMD.com is the web’s leading platform where physicians, advanced practitioners, nurses, medical students, and patients share their insight and tell their stories.

Social

  • Like on Facebook
  • Follow on Twitter
  • Connect on Linkedin
  • Subscribe on Youtube
  • Instagram

ADVERTISEMENT

  • Most Popular

  • Past Week

    • Politics and fear have replaced science in U.S. pain management [PODCAST]

      The Podcast by KevinMD | Podcast
    • Evidence-based medicine vs. clinical judgment: a medical student’s perspective

      Jay Pendyala | Education
    • The controversy over Maintenance of Certification for grandfathered physicians

      Bernard Leo Remakus, MD | Physician
    • How hindsight bias distorts clinical medicine

      Olumuyiwa Bamgbade, MD | Physician
    • When side effects are actually a cry for help with medication costs

      Shuchita Gupta, MD | Physician
    • The hidden math behind physician hiring costs and recruitment

      Timothy Lesaca, MD | Physician
  • Past 6 Months

    • The dangers of vertical integration in health care

      Stephanie Waggel, MD | Policy
    • Why does sex work seem like a more viable path than medicine in 2026?

      Corina Fratila, MD | Physician
    • The 9 laws of health care quality: Why metrics miss the point

      Constantine Ioannou, MD | Physician
    • Politics and fear have replaced science in U.S. pain management [PODCAST]

      The Podcast by KevinMD | Podcast
    • From Singapore to Canada: a blueprint for primary care transformation

      Ivy Oandasan, MD | Policy
    • How board certification fuels the physician shortage crisis

      Brian Hudes, MD | Physician
  • Recent Posts

    • Health care affordability crisis: lessons from the NYC nursing strike

      Marc Henry Estriplet, MD, MPH | Physician
    • How wearable technology is changing the role of physicians

      Jeffrey Junig, MD, PhD | Tech
    • Workplace violence against nurses: a crisis of systemic failure

      Amanda Dean, RN | Conditions
    • Ignored DNR hospital policy: a family’s tragic end-of-life story

      Amanda Cutshall | Conditions
    • Why measuring muscle mass matters more than tracking your weight [PODCAST]

      The Podcast by KevinMD | Podcast
    • Health insurance incentives and alternatives to opioids for chronic pain

      Molly Candon, PhD and Daniel Clauw, MD | Conditions

MedPage Today Professional

An Everyday Health Property Medpage Today

Copyright © 2026 KevinMD.com | Powered by Astra WordPress Theme

  • Terms of Use | Disclaimer
  • Privacy Policy
  • DMCA Policy
All Content © KevinMD, LLC
Site by Outthink Group

We seem reluctant to remember that people incarcerated are exactly that: people
3 comments

Comments are moderated before they are published. Please read the comment policy.

Loading Comments...