I am not only an alumnus of hospitals but also, as both a lawyer and minister, prisons. What do they have to do with caregiving? See if you spot similarities.

Death Row:

“You can’t comprehend the hell ,” Glenn, growled at me during out first meeting on a sunny Sunday in 2012.

Was he talking about his suffering in a cancer unit? A mental hospital? Being trapped under a car?

Glenn was trapped. A pane of bulletproof glass separated us. His ankles bore chains.  Convicted of a double murder, he lived with a death sentence.

The hell Glenn correctly described as beyond my understanding was a cell on Tennessee’s Death Row. No one visited him. That is why, as a recently ordained minister, I volunteered help.

Glenn instantly delivered two blunt instructions: “Don’t expect me to trust you and don’t give me any Christian bull****.”

He sketched his hell: “I’m alone 23 hours a day. My one hour “outside” is in a steel cage with a concrete floor and a basketball rim. I haven’t touched grass in seven years. In the showers, I have to keep my head on a swivel.”

He receives another unwritten punishment. Caged like a wild animal, he is treated like one.

Prisons and hospitals? Both are designed for safety.

It is not the physical settings we can change. It is the staff culture inside where change delivers lifesaving humanity.

We know this, but hospitals that practice it are rare. Compassion and curing are not seen as necessary partners! We know prison/hospital differences.

Consider similarities:

Both judges and doctors can deliver news of imminent death or prolonged pain. Neither required to give loving care.

Prisoner’s clothes become orange uniforms. Patients find themselves wearing an equally humiliating uniform.

Hard to say which is more degrading.

Prison numbers. Patient numbers.

Cells with a stranger.  Semi privates with a stranger.

PA systems announcing the end of visiting hours in both?

The power/disempower tension in hospitals is unintended but palpable.

Patient: sick. Professional: healthy.

Professional: knowledgeable. Patient: ignorant.

Caregiver: vertical. Patient: horizontal

Home atmosphere: warmth, family, freedom. Prison/hospital, cold, strangers, restricted.

Both prisoners and patients (unless AMA) need permission to leave.

We cannot change the building. We can change the people.

JCAHO is not going to require loving care. Hospitals can.

It would be nice if prisons practiced radical loving care. Cultures of Radical Loving Care should be required in all hospitals.

Otherwise, if you want to feel like a prisoner, check into a hospital.

-Erie Chapman

Hospitals And Prisons: How Both Threaten Loving Care

I am not only an alumnus of hospitals but also, as both a lawyer and minister, prisons. What do they have to do with caregiving? See if you spot similarities.

Death Row:

“You can’t comprehend the hell ,” Glenn, growled at me during out first meeting on a sunny Sunday in 2012.

Was he talking about his suffering in a cancer unit? A mental hospital? Being trapped under a car?

Glenn was trapped. A pane of bulletproof glass separated us. His ankles bore chains.  Convicted of a double murder, he lived with a death sentence.

The hell Glenn correctly described as beyond my understanding was a cell on Tennessee’s Death Row. No one visited him. That is why, as a recently ordained minister, I volunteered help.

Glenn instantly delivered two blunt instructions: “Don’t expect me to trust you and don’t give me any Christian bull****.”

He sketched his hell: “I’m alone 23 hours a day. My one hour “outside” is in a steel cage with a concrete floor and a basketball rim. I haven’t touched grass in seven years. In the showers, I have to keep my head on a swivel.”

He receives another unwritten punishment. Caged like a wild animal, he is treated like one.

Prisons and hospitals? Both are designed for safety.

It is not the physical settings we can change. It is the staff culture inside where change delivers lifesaving humanity.

We know this, but hospitals that practice it are rare. Compassion and curing are not seen as necessary partners! We know prison/hospital differences.

Consider similarities:

Both judges and doctors can deliver news of imminent death or prolonged pain. Neither required to give loving care.

Prisoner’s clothes become orange uniforms. Patients find themselves wearing an equally humiliating uniform.

Hard to say which is more degrading.

Prison numbers. Patient numbers.

Cells with a stranger.  Semi privates with a stranger.

PA systems announcing the end of visiting hours in both?

The power/disempower tension in hospitals is unintended but palpable.

Patient: sick. Professional: healthy.

Professional: knowledgeable. Patient: ignorant.

Caregiver: vertical. Patient: horizontal

Home atmosphere: warmth, family, freedom. Prison/hospital, cold, strangers, restricted.

Both prisoners and patients (unless AMA) need permission to leave.

We cannot change the building. We can change the people.

JCAHO is not going to require loving care. Hospitals can.

It would be nice if prisons practiced radical loving care. Cultures of Radical Loving Care should be required in all hospitals.

Otherwise, if you want to feel like a prisoner, check into a hospital.

-Erie Chapman

Erie "Chip" Chapman Avatar

Published by

2 responses to “Hospitals And Prisons: How Both Threaten Loving Care”

  1. Erie "Chip" Chapman Avatar

     I wish to acknowledge you, Erie for the accompaniment that you offered Glenn over those 7 years. Although he sounded skeptical at your initial encounter, I imagine he looked forward to your visits. You courageously showed up for him, time and time again and offered a listening presence, non-judgment and an unconditional regard. Over time, I bet he trusted you like no other for being there, when no one else was, during those long years of imprisonment. What an act of Radical Loving Care (RLC).

    What comes to mind is Matthew 25:35-40  

     ‘Lord, when did we see you hungry and feed you, or thirsty and give you something to drink?  When did we see you a stranger and invite you in, or needing clothes and clothe you?  When did we see you sick or in prison and go to visit you?’

     “Amen, I say to you, whatever you did for one of the least brothers of mine, you did for me.”

    Thank you Erie, for a lifetime of service and for giving yourself so generously for the sake of others in all of your endeavors. Your pioneering visionary leadership has helped to successfully create cultures of RLC in healthcare that has benefited countless leaders, caregivers, patients and families.

    Liz Wessel

    Liked by 1 person

    1. Erie "Chip" Chapman Avatar

      Thank you so very much, Liz. Love your reference to Matthew 25! The tough thing about Christianity – and RLC for that matter – is not understanding it but practicing it. I still do a subpar job at that. Thank YOU for being such a model of love.

      Like

Leave a comment