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Litigation Medical Malpractice

Institutional Deliberate Indifference

Proving Constitutional Violation

Part Two of a Two-Part Article

Conclusion of a discussion about Glisson v. Indiana Dept. of Correction, in which Alma Glisson, whose son Nicholas died while in prison, sued the correctional facility for employing the services of medical contractor Correctional Medical Services, Inc. (Corizon).

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We began to look last month at the case of Glisson v. Indiana Dept. of Correction, 2017 U.S. App. LEXIS 3101 (7th Cir., 2/21/17), in which Alma Glisson, whose son Nicholas died while in prison, sued the correctional facility for employing the services of medical contractor Correctional Medical Services, Inc. (Corizon). Glisson alleged that Corizon violated her son’s constitutional right under the Eighth Amendment to be free from cruel and unusual punishment, claiming that they deliberately had a policy in place not to coordinate care for chronically ill prisoners.

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