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LettersPublished on August 27, 1998Suicide Botch Sean O'Connor "Suicide Mission" was a real public service. So-called mental-health evaluations by unqualified providers are only unfair in the best case, tragic in the worst case. As a psychologist, I've found that most patients referred to me have been injured at work or in motor vehicle accidents. The Colorado Department of Labor and Employment's Division of Workers' Compensation has published medical-treatment guidelines, especially for evaluation and management of chronic pain, which specify that all patients with chronic pain will have psychosocial evaluation and that the evaluation must be done by psychiatric MDs/DOs or Ph.D. or Psy.D. psychologists (or certain other licensed mental-health professionals who are supervised by psychiatrists or psychologists). It is very unfair and also dangerous, but unfortunately quite common, for nonpsychiatric MDs to render opinions about the mental-health status of patients. David D. Robinson, Ph.D. John Sheron tried twice to kill himself, and a hospital "wrongfully caused" him to succeed? Puh-leeze! Let evolution take its course! David Hakala The woman who did John Sheron's "assessment" would seem to be the one who needs to skip the margaritas. Any sober professional could see that this was a man in serious trouble. Joelie Larson Sympathy for the Devils Yes, Dorothy, this is not Kansas, and something is seriously wrong--to wit, the hundred sociopathic criminals ("guys" sounds so much less malignant) who have finally encountered a system that refuses to simply roll over in the face of their stubbornness and now snivel "poor pitiful me." David Carroll All of us with loved ones inside CSP owe a debt of gratitude to Alan Prendergast for "Hard Cell." We all know about the cell extractions, beatings, psychological torture and strip-celling perpetrated on our prisoners. The public certainly doesn't care, because CSP houses "the worst of the worst." But the Department of Corrections defines "worst of the worst" any way that suits them. Perhaps that's one reason so many jailhouse lawyers have been shipped to CSP--to silence voices of dissent. Once inside CSP, these men have absolutely no rights. Even when they're allowed to file grievances, the problem is never addressed. I'll wager that in the history of CSP, not one prisoner has ever won a grievance. (To anyone at the DOC: Prove me wrong.) I guess that's because prisoners are always misguided idiots or violent revolutionaries bent on the destruction of the system. The poor DOC. Not only does it have all the weapons and staff and power and control on its side, but it also has the state legislature and public opinion. What's a helpless bureaucracy to do? My loved one has been kept at CSP for three years because he is a "high-profile prisoner." We've had our mail confiscated for such seditious material as Winnie the Pooh drawings and a chapter from Thomas Costain's medieval classic The Conquering Family. Although CSP cannot arbitrarily keep mail out unless it's a "threat to the facility," I guess Piglet and Pooh and Richard the Lionheart are secret instruments of insurrection. More seriously, nothing critical of CSP is ever allowed inside. I am going to send my prisoner a copy of "Hard Cell"; no doubt Warden Neal will confiscate that, too. Mary Ellen Johnson The Thrones of God Sherry Patten Tortured Logic
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