4.0 Article

Qualitative Analysis of Transgender Inmates' Correspondence: Implications for Departments of Correction

Journal

JOURNAL OF CORRECTIONAL HEALTH CARE
Volume 20, Issue 4, Pages 334-342

Publisher

MARY ANN LIEBERT, INC
DOI: 10.1177/1078345814541533

Keywords

prison; transgender; policies; transsexual; gender identity

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Claims of inadequate health care and safety afforded to transgender inmates have become the subject of litigation. This article reviews 129 unsolicited letters from transgender inmates writing from 24 states and the Federal Bureau of Prisons to identify their concerns. Among the letters reviewed were reports from 10 inmates who had filed lawsuits naming departments of correction (DOCs) as defendants, claiming inadequate access to transgender health care. Five of these lawsuits have gone to trial. In all of those cases, the defendant settled the matter or was found liable as of the time of this report. Claims of inadequate care for transgendered patients that have sufficient merit to be fully litigated in U. S. courts appear likely to produce verdicts in favor of plaintiff inmates. The information gleaned from reviewing letters from transgendered inmates may alert staffs of DOCs to concerns worth addressing proactively to avoid the costs associated with transgender-related lawsuits.

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