Ethics of Caring for Detained People on Hunger Strike
Annals of Internal Medicine
Mar 8, 2022
When a detained person refuses food, their medical team faces ethical challenges. Center Director Matthew Wynia, MD, MPH and co-authors affirm that hunger strikes by immigrants and asylum seekers are constitutionally protected, nonviolent protests of last resort, which occur with remarkable frequency (2,500 during the first 6 months of the pandemic) in ICE detention facilities. Medical care in private prisonsoperated by GEO Group illustrate disregard for the ethical standards, by using force-feeding for punitive rather than medical reasons. Wynia says force-feeding and other involuntary medical procedures on people who choose to undertake hunger strikes should stop, and health care professionals and their professional associations should play a role in supporting this reform. Read article>>
Medpage Today also interviewed Dr. Wynia about this topic and article. View video interview>>