This Article addresses the problems with our nation\u27s cultural and legal prohibitions against certain pain management treatments. The practice of pain management has not kept pace with the many medical advances that have made it possible for physicians to ameliorate most pain. The Author notes that some patients are denied access to certain forms of treatments due to the mistaken belief that addiction may ensue. Additionally, some individuals are under-treated for their pain to a greater degree than are others. This is especially the case for our nation\u27s prisoners. The Author contends that prisoners are frequently denied effective pain amelioration. He notes, however, that there has been improvement in medical treatment in general fo...
While decarceration has become fashionable, American penology remains in the throes of a penal harm ...
This article explores whether a state law imposing a flat ban on the use of funds to provide cross-g...
American legal discourse on torture takes for granted some, usually all, of the following propositio...
This Article addresses the problems with our nation\u27s cultural and legal prohibitions against cer...
Currently, approximately 1.8 million people are incarcerated in the United States at any given time....
This article explores how the implementation of the penal harm movement within a correctional health...
Debilitating pain is a widespread problem that cuts across many patient populations. Despite a recog...
Only one group of people in the United States has a constitutional right to health care—the incarcer...
Although supported by both ethical and pragmatic imperatives, pain treatment faces significant barri...
This article reviews state tort remedies assessed against correctional personnel for inappropriate a...
About eighty percent of all inmates in the United States need but will not receive treatment for the...
In recent years, prison officials have increasingly turned to solitary confinement as a way to manag...
Prisoners are legally categorized as a vulnerable group for the purposes of medical research, but th...
There is a large gap between contemporary evidence-based remedies for pain control and what is offer...
In prison populations, treating pain is particularly challenging, especially for the growing number ...
While decarceration has become fashionable, American penology remains in the throes of a penal harm ...
This article explores whether a state law imposing a flat ban on the use of funds to provide cross-g...
American legal discourse on torture takes for granted some, usually all, of the following propositio...
This Article addresses the problems with our nation\u27s cultural and legal prohibitions against cer...
Currently, approximately 1.8 million people are incarcerated in the United States at any given time....
This article explores how the implementation of the penal harm movement within a correctional health...
Debilitating pain is a widespread problem that cuts across many patient populations. Despite a recog...
Only one group of people in the United States has a constitutional right to health care—the incarcer...
Although supported by both ethical and pragmatic imperatives, pain treatment faces significant barri...
This article reviews state tort remedies assessed against correctional personnel for inappropriate a...
About eighty percent of all inmates in the United States need but will not receive treatment for the...
In recent years, prison officials have increasingly turned to solitary confinement as a way to manag...
Prisoners are legally categorized as a vulnerable group for the purposes of medical research, but th...
There is a large gap between contemporary evidence-based remedies for pain control and what is offer...
In prison populations, treating pain is particularly challenging, especially for the growing number ...
While decarceration has become fashionable, American penology remains in the throes of a penal harm ...
This article explores whether a state law imposing a flat ban on the use of funds to provide cross-g...
American legal discourse on torture takes for granted some, usually all, of the following propositio...