RI Advocates Seek Executive Order To Ensure Patient Rights Of Disabled

By Gina Macris

The need of some people with disabilities to have a trusted person at their side to help them communicate with strangers has run up against the visitors’ ban imposed by hospitals to curb the spread of the coronavirus.

These patients have been traumatized and their medical care jeopardized in a violation of their civil rights, say Rhode Island disability rights advocates.

During the first coronavirus surge in the spring, at the urging of Disability Rights Rhode Island and other advocates, the Rhode Island Department of Health adopted a policy that exempts family members and others who act as caregivers from hospitals’ ban on visitors when patients need assistance to receive the appropriate care and to communicate with hospital staff.

But DRRI now says that the policy is not widely understood, and patients who have disabilities like dementia and autism run a high risk of being traumatized in the hospital, exhibiting new problems that make it more difficult for medical personnel to treat them.

DRRI, the Sherlock Center on Disabilities at Rhode Island College, and the Rhode Island Developmental Disabilities Council are seeking an executive order from Governor Gina Raimondo to get quick enforcement of the policy, especially during hospital admission, when it is urgently needed.

In a letter dated December 2, the executive directors of the three organizations cited 7 specific instances during the last two months in which care was compromised and patients were disoriented and severely upset.

The examples, drawn from “dozens” of complaints, including two concerning patients with severe communications problems who were administered anti-psychotic medication when they became uncooperative.

One was an elderly nursing home resident with dementia and depression who is also deaf and legally blind. She was admitted for a broken hip. Another was a young man with autism who is non-verbal. In addition to being drugged, he was restrained physically. Now he is showing signs of dementia, hospital officials have told his mother, who they continue to bar from the hospital.

The health department policy says that “when a support person is essential to the care of a patient with a disability, including patients who have altered mental status, communication barriers, or behavioral concerns (such as patients with intellectual and/or developmental disabilities, dementia, and/or behavioral health needs), accommodations for the patient should be made so that the patient can be accompanied by the support person.”

The policy goes on to describe the role of the support person in facilitating communication, equal access to treatment and informed consent “in accordance with the civil rights of patients with disabilities.” And it gives wide latitude to the definition of support person, including family members, guardians, and paid and non-paid caregivers and advocates.

The letter to Raimondo emphasizes that “this is not an issue of ‘hospital visitation’ policy, as it has sometimes erroneously been termed, although the language is unfortunately (albeit understandably) contained within ‘visitation’ policy provisions.”

“We understand the reasons for curtailing typical visitation in hospitals during the pandemic, and we fully support such restrictions when they are not essential to an individual’s access to care.”

The letter was signed by the executive directors of the three organizations, Morna Murray of DRRI; Amy Grattan of the Sherlock Center; and Kevin Nerney of the Developmental[ Disabilities Council.

The authors said the Department of Health was to follow up on the policy with a plan for ensuring hospital compliance, but no plan has materialized in the last seven months.

Meanwhile, the three agencies have continued to receive complaints from “dozens of individuals and families.” They have helped the patients and families follow up with the hospitals and officials of the health department, the executive directors said. Some have put off needed medical care for family members with disabilities because of the ban on hospital visitation, they said.

“The bottom line is that violations continue to occur and there does not appear to be any single authority that can be cited quickly and conclusively so that the intended policy can be implemented on the spot, when it is needed most urgently,” the letter said.

Having exhausted other channels over the last seven months, Murray, Grattan and Nerney said, they are seeking a virtual meeting with Raimondo to discuss the need for an executive order “to resolve this alarming situation as quickly and conclusively as possible.”

Racism Compounds Stresses of COVID-19, Say RI DD Community Voices

Iraida Williams

Iraida Williams

By Gina Macris

(This article was updated June 9 )

A Rhode Island man with developmental disabilities, stuck at home since the start of the COVID-19 pandemic, is anxious to get back to his regular activities but also is “afraid to take out the trash because he’s black,’’ his mother told a virtual crowd of about 170 people June 5.

Iraida Williams, the man’s mother, spoke during a Zoom forum co-sponsored by the state Executive Office of Health and Human Services (EOHHS) and the Rhode Island Parent Information Network to discuss the hopes and fears of those involved with the developmental disability services. 

Marti Rosenberg

Marti Rosenberg

Marti Rosenberg, the moderator or the forum, replied that “just this morning,  EOHHS  has been grappling with these concerns.”

Rosenberg, director of Policy, Planning and Research at EOHHS, said the leadership wants to make sure that “EOHHS agencies are specifically having those difficult conversations.

 “We need to make sure we have an absolutely specific answer for your son,” she told Williams.

Williams said, “I look forward to hearing back from somebody.”

Until now, quarterly community forums on developmental disabilities have been run by the Department of Behavioral Healthcare, Developmental Disabilities and Hospitals (BHDDH).

But in choosing Rosenberg to moderate Friday’s event, EOHHS signaled a desire to bring the particular concerns of those facing intellectual and developmental challenges to the highest levels of the executive branch of state government.

On June 9, a BHDDH spokesman offered additional context, saying that EOHHS has been helping its member agencies with planning throughout the COVID crisis. Rosenberg had facilitated a number of reopening planning conversations with providers and other community members in partnership with BHDDH and DCYF, and the June 5 Zoom meeting was another in that series.

The meeting was almost entirely given over to participants and their ideas for re-opening regular services. But echoes of ongoing protests against racism in Providence and across the nation were never far from the surface.

Kelly Donovan

Kelly Donovan

Kelly Donovan, who receives state-funded services and is a vocal advocate for herself and her peers, said “people are either antsy to resume their lives or afraid of going out.” In the chat box that accompanied the audio and video of the Zoom meeting, she said she herself is “worried about getting sick and equally worried about the United States turning into a dictatorship.”

Ken Renault of the advocacy group RI FORCE said he had concerns about the neglect or abuse of people with disabilities because of the stresses of the last few months.

Rosenberg said group home residents of color and workers of color have been experiencing even more stresses because of the massive attention to police brutality that has been the focus of widespread protests organized on the heels of the pandemic lockdown.

The COVID_19 pandemic has highlighted the difference between the haves and the have-nots and, and it’s time to recognize the institutional racism in the dividing line between them, said Kevin Nerney, executive director of the Rhode Island Developmental Disabilities Council.

“Yes,” wrote Donovan in the chat box that accompanied the video. “Institutionalized racism is a problem. It is rampant!”

Separately, Nerney and the leaders of Disability Rights Rhode Island and the Sherlock Center on Disabilities at Rhode Island College released a statement decrying the death of George Floyd in police custody in Minneapolis May 25, calling it murder.

“The RI DD Network stands on the side of those who are protesting another needless death, who reject hate, and who demand justice. We are committed to effectuating full inclusion in society and working for the civil and human rights of Rhode Islanders with disabilities of all races, cultural backgrounds and ethnicities,” the statement said. It was issued by Morna Murray of DRRI and Amy Grattan of the Sherlock Center, in addition to Nerney.

Kevin Nerney

Kevin Nerney

During the meeting, Nerney said people with resources have weathered the statewide lockdown with few problems, but the have-nots have struggled.

COVID-19 can be a “springboard for systems change going forward,” Nerney said.

Tina Spears, executive director of the Community Provider Network of Rhode Island, asked what day services might look like as the state re-opens.

“People won’t be able to congregate in the same ways they did before the pandemic hit,” Spears said. It will be “challenging for all of us. How can we administratively and financially do this?”

Thirty percent of daytime services occur in group activities in day centers, according to the independent federal court monitor overseeing the state’s efforts to integrate adults with developmental disabilities in their communities. The monitor, A. Anthony Antosh, has asked that center-based care be eliminated when daytime services resume on a broad scale.

That move would inherently increase costs for providing services because supporting people in the community individually or in small groups is more labor-intensive than overseeing them all in one facility.

(Some agencies are able to provide limited one-on-one or small group services in the community during the pandemic, depending on individual circomstances.)

Nerney said that in an improved system of services, the consumer “has to have full control of planning, evaluation and budget, with assistance from trusted people.”

And the system must move away from congregate care while still giving people a full array of supports, he said.

That last comment sparked push-back from some parents, who said there will always be a need for group homes.

Kevin Savage, the director of the Division of Developmental Disabilities, addressed the issue:

Kevin Savage

Kevin Savage

“If we say we need congregate care, we can’t imagine providing services another way, in-home or living independently,” he said.

“The ultimate goal is people making their own choices,” he said. While the state closed its institution for people with developmental disabilities more than 20 years ago, if people are living in group homes with others not of their own choice, the de-institutionalization is not complete, Savage said.

Since 1994, when the Ladd School closed,  Rhode Island has supported relatively few housing options for adults with developmental disabilities. And housing is a primary concern, particularly for aging parents.

Savage did not address the cost of safe and supportive alternatives to group homes. For example, staffing an apartment with two or three residents 24 hours a day is inherently more costly than providing that coverage in a group home setting with four to eight residents.

Claire Rosenbaum, coordinator of adult supports at the Sherlock Center, said during the Zoom meeting that many people with intellectual or developmental disabilities may experience some depression as a result of the continuing isolation and may need mental health supports built into their services.

Other comments touched on a need to enable adults with developmental disabilities to have easy access to technology. Rory Carmody of AccessPoint RI and Casey Gartland of Perspectives explained how they used remote audio and video and other hi-tech capabilities to continue to place and support some clients in jobs during the pandemic and to conduct other activities.

John Susa, a parent and long-time advocate, said the Division of Developmental Disabilities has relaxed “a lot of unnecessary rules” during the pandemic. He said he would like the state to ”keep as many of those relaxations in place” as possible.

Carolyn Maxwell, who directs her daughter’s services, said she is particularly pleased about a rule change that allows her to receive compensation for the work she does with her daughter, Emily.

Maxwell, a teacher, said at the previous community forum in March that she was never able to return to the classroom after Emily was born 27 years ago. At the same time, she has had difficulty finding paid staff to work with her.

Maxwell has helped Emily start an online business called “Love Letters By Emily” that features handmade note cards and art photography incorporating American Sign Language, which Emily uses in daily life.

Speaking via Zoom last Friday, Maxwell said that being compensated as Emily’s caregiver has been a “huge help to us.” She wants the rule change to become permanent.

Savage, the state’s developmental disabilities director, said in mid-May that the relaxed rules on hiring legal guardians and other family members would remain in effect. Savage made the comment during a federal court hearing in mid-May on the way adults with developmental disabilities have fared during the pandemic, in conjunction with a 2014 consent decree that gives the court jurisdiction over state-funded daytime services.

Addressing procedures for re-opening developmental disability services, state officials said they anticipated guidelines for ending the lockdown at group homes to be issued later in the day on June 5. The guidelines were issued June 6. To read them, click here.

Service providers are expected to use the guidelines to develop a plan for re-opening group homes to family visits and other normal comings and goings, said Rosenbaum, the adult supports coordinator at the Sherlock Center. Plans must get approval from the BHDDH before they are implemented. (An earlier version of this article incorrectly said approval must come from the Department of Health.)

Rosenberg said the first set of guidelines will apply only to group homes. A separate second set of guidelines will be issued for day services, she said.

The resumption of day services would follow the same sequence, with the issuance of guidelines for providers to draft plans specific to their agencies.

Photos of themselves courtesy of Iraida Williams and Marti Rosenberg. All other photos by Anne Peters.

COVID-19 Claims 3 More Lives in RI DD Group Homes; Advocates Press For Justice

By Gina Macris

As the death toll from the coronavirus has ticked up in Rhode Island group homes for adults with developmental disabilities during the last two weeks, two community organizations have turned their focus to the multiple aspects of social justice - in health care equity and in issues of race.

As of June 3, a total of 10 group home residents have died from COVID-19, or 3 more than were reported about two weeks ago, on May 19, according to a spokesman for the state Department of Behavioral healthcare, Developmental Disabilities and Hospitals (BHDDH,)

Those who have died are included in a count of 138 persons with developmental disabilities in congregate care who have tested positive for the disease. The total represents an increase of 16 cases since May 19, according to figures provided by the spokesman.

Of all those who have become ill, 17 persons have been sick enough to be hospitalized at one point or another, the BHDDH spokesman said.

While the incidence of coronavirus is on the wane in Rhode Island, Disability Rights Rhode Island (DRRI) has been scrutinizing what it says are discriminatory state health care guidelines which could still be used in the future to ration care if the hospital system becomes overwhelmed.

A spokesman for the Rhode Island Department of Health said DRRI and several disability-related partner organizations have provided “important feedback” that will be considered as health officials move forward.

The developmental disabilities community has been preoccupied in the last few months with issues of equity in access to protective equipment and health care resources for vulnerable people, but ongoing concerns about civil rights should be put in a broader context in which racism permeates, said Tina Spears, executive director of the Community Provider Network of Rhode Island (CPNRI).

Spears and Michael Andrade, President of the CPNRI Board of Directors, issued a statement June 2 saying that CPNRI “stands in solidarity with the people and communities in our state and across the country who continue to bear the physical, emotional, and economic effects of racism” - including people of color who belong to the direct care workforce and families supported by CPNRI.

The statement was prompted by the death of George Floyd, a 46 year-old black man who suffered a heart attack May 25 after a Minneapolis police officer put his knee to the man’s neck for nearly nine minutes. Floyd’s death has roiled the nation, from protests in the streets to politics at the highest levels in Washington.

“We speak out against the historical and current violence against Black, brown, and other members of marginalized communities,” Spears and Andrade said. “As a network, we remain committed to upholding social justice and dismantling systems of oppression and discrimination that further violence and neglect,” the pair said, pledging to work with other like-minded groups throughout the state and the nation to “combat the root causes and outcomes of racism.”

Meanwhile, Disability Rights Rhode Island (DRRI) has recommended changes to eliminate what it says are inherently discriminatory provisions in recent guidelines issued by the state Department of Health that could be used in allocating health care resources.

DRRI acknowledges that the discussion remains theoretical – for now – as hospitals have not exceeded their capacities and emergency facilities set up to deal with an overload of coronavirus patients have remained unused.

In a May 19 letter to the Director of Health, Nicole Alexander-Scott, MD MPH, DRRI and other partner organizations have said the “Crisis Standards of Care”, issued April 25, leave the door open for discrimination against those with disabilities and older Rhode Islanders by allowing health care officials to make subjective decisions about patients’ long-range survival or quality of life after discharge.

In response to a query from Developmental Disability News, a DOH spokesman said the department has “a commitment to ensuring equitable and just access to care for all Rhode Islanders, especially more vulnerable populations.

“We worked hard to try to have that commitment reflected in the document that was developed. Having said that, this is important feedback that we are going to consider internally as we look forward and think about ways that we can better ensure health equity for everyone throughout the state,” said the spokesman.

DRRI noted that Rhode Island’s principle for ensuring equity in access to healthcare “acknowledges the need for transparent criteria for allocating resources that are free from influence by inappropriate factors such as race, gender, socioeconomic status or sexual identity.” But the letter said that “disability and age” are missing from the list of inappropriate factors. This omission “appears intentional,” since the triage assessments and criteria described in the guidelines authorize “explicit and implicit” consideration of age and disability in excluding patients from access to scarce resources.

Among other things, the guidelines allow hospitals to screen out patients having a “medical condition associated with a short life expectancy” from access to critical healthcare resources, DRRI said. “Because ‘short life-expectancy’ is not defined, hospitals and clinicians are free to interpret the term and make subjective judgments regarding its meaning,” the letter said.

Many people who are aging or have disabilities also experience medical conditions that can be perceived as shortening life expectancy, and are at higher risk for being excluded from consideration based on clinicians’ subjective decisions, the letter said.

Although the guidelines take into account some conditions which are accommodated during the triage process, they fail to recognize pre-existing impairments such as limitations in mobility or speech, which would have an effect on an assessment of traumatic brain injury, DRRI said.

Nor do the guidelines mention federal laws applying to hospitals that prohibit discrimination on the basis of disability and require hospitals to make reasonable modifications to policies and practices to allow persons with disabilities to benefit from the services provided.

In a detailed analysis of the DOH guidelines, DRRI described the pertinent sections of federal anti-discrimination laws: Title II of the Americans With Disabilities Act, Section 504 of the Rehabilitation Act of 1973, and Section 1557 of the Patient Protection and Affordable Care Act (ACA.)

DRRI recommended revising the Crisis Standards of Care to comply with civil rights laws by eliminating criteria linked to survival beyond the illness which prompted the hospitalization at hand and by requiring hospitals to make accommodations for disabilities, like limitations in mobility and communications skills.

It also recommended that DOH broaden the grounds for appeal of triage decisions to include discrimination on the grounds of disability. The current grounds for appeal, permitted only for technical or procedural injustices, are overly narrow, DRRI said. To read the letter in its entirety, click here.

The letter was signed by Morna Murray, executive director of DRRI, as well as Steven Brown, executive director of the American Civil Liberties Union in Rhode Island; Amy Grattan, executive director of the Paul V. Sherlock Center on Disabilities at Rhode Island College; Kevin Nerney, executive director of the Rhode Island Developmental Disabilities Council, Advocates in Action; Joanna Scocchi, director of the ARC Rhode Island Family Advocacy Network; Debra L. Sharpe, executive director of the Brain Injiury Association of Rhode Island; Spears, the CPNRI director, Marc Anthony Gallucci, executive director of the Ocean State Center for Independent Living; and Kim M. Einloth and Kiernan O’Donnell, co-chairs of the Rhode Island Employment First Task Force.

Disability Rights RI and ACLU Sue To End Solitary Confinement For Inmates With Mental illness

From l to R: Steve Brown, exec director of RI ACLU; James Rollins, ACLU Cooperating Attorney and a partner at Nelson, Mullins, Riley & Scarborough, LLP in Boston; Amy Fettig of the ACLU Prison Project; Morna Murray, exec.director of Disability R…

From l to R: Steve Brown, exec director of RI ACLU; James Rollins, ACLU Cooperating Attorney and a partner at Nelson, Mullins, Riley & Scarborough, LLP in Boston; Amy Fettig of the ACLU Prison Project; Morna Murray, exec.director of Disability Rights RI; and Charles Feldman of the oasis Wellness and Recovery Centers RI * Photo Courtesty of Disability Rights RI

By Gina Macris

Disability Rights Rhode Island, formerly the RI Disability Law Center, has joined with the American Civil Liberties Union (ACLU) in filing a federal class action lawsuit on behalf of prison inmates with mental illness.

The announcement of the lawsuit on Oct. 25 also signaled that the re-framed Disability Rights Rhode Island will shift to a more systemic approach and aggressive stance in protecting vulnerable populations – including those with developmental disabilities.

In a press conference in Providence, Disability Rights Rhode Island, the ACLU’s National Prison Project and the ACLU’s Rhode Island affiliate announced the class action suit, which seeks to end the alleged inhumane and unconstitutional use of solitary confinement to punish inmates with serious mental illnesses, resulting in their further psychological deterioration. The complaint also seeks other sweeping changes in the treatment of inmates disabled by mental illness.

The lawsuit against the Rhode Island Department of Corrections alleges that the Adult Correctional Institutions (ACI) “subjects hundreds of people to prolonged solitary confinement in tiny, frequently filthy cells where they are kept locked down for 22 to 24 hours a day for weeks, months, and even years at a time,” according to a statement.

These inhumane conditions “subject individuals to serious psychological harm and increasingly acute symptoms” such as anxiety, depression, social withdrawal, paranoia, agitation, and suicidal ideation, according to a joint statement issued by the lawyers on behalf of six principal plaintiffs.

After a legislative commission recommended changes to the ACI’s treatment of inmates with mental illnesses in 2017, the Department of Corrections set up an alternative Residential Treatment Unit, but the plaintiffs say it is wholly inadequate.

Despite scores of inmates in solitary confinement on any given day, the Residential Treatment Unit has a capacity of only 8 men, and there is no alternate facility for women inmates with mental illness, the plaintiffs said.

At the press conference, Morna Murray, the new executive director of Disability Rights Rhode Island, recalled that a former director of behavioral health for the Department of Corrections, psychologist Louis Cerbo, told the state legislative commission on solitary confinement in 2017 that the ACI is the “the largest psychiatric hospital in Rhode Island.”

At the same time, Cerbo’s testimony indicated that the previous year, in 2016, the Department of Corrections had only 11 clinical social workers for a prison population of 3,000, Murray recalled.

A corrections staff untrained in the symptoms of mental illness and the appropriate de-escalation techniques instead uses force –particularly pepper spray – as the reaction of first resort to control inmates, Murray said.

After the press conference, Murray said the organization’s name change and its participation in the lawsuit represent a shift in approach.

“We are increasingly looking to create change on a larger and more systemic level. We know we can effect change for a much larger number of individuals with disabilities that way,“ she said.

Improvements in behavioral healthcare for ACI inmates is the organization’s top priority in the coming year, according to a redesigned website, Disability Rights RI, which is still undergoing improvements, Murray said.

“We will always continue to take individual cases, but we also have staff dedicated to the kind of aggressive and systemic change that this class action lawsuit represents,” Murray said. A more concentrated focus on systemic change will inevitably mean the disability rights lawyers on staff will be unable to take as many individual cases, she said.

But the organization is developing new group training sessions, webinars, and other resources to help creating many more resources, trainings and webinars to help individuals, parents and families to have the capacity to advocate for themselves when they can, Murray said.

“We are presently looking at other issues in the state that may lend themselves to larger actions, either legally or administratively with respect to state agencies,” she said. Before arriving in Rhode Island earlier this year, Murray headed the Connecticut state developmental disability agency, overseeing services for 17,000 people. She has spent most of her career as a public interest lawyer in the private sector, advocating for vulnerable populations.

Disability Rights Rhode Island is one of a nationwide network of federally funded protection and advocacy organizations mandated by Congress in 1975 after the exposure of inhumane conditions at Willowbrook, an institution for people with developmental disabilities on Staten Island. Murray may be contacted at mmurray@drri.org