New York
Related: About this forumResidents, guards say Marcy psychiatric center is coronavirus hothouse
ALBANY At least 18 people nine inmates and nine officers have been infected with COVID-19 at the Central New York Psychiatric Center which houses sex offenders who have been released from prison but are civilly confined in the hospital.
Technically, the inmates are patients and the guards are supervisors, attendants and therapists, but both groups say theyve seen alarming lapses in the precautions put in place to slow the pandemics spread at the institution in Marcy.
Its basically a death trap in here, said one resident, who declined to give his full name.
He said three separate wards in the facility were under quarantine but the patients, almost all men, crowd together in the halls when staff members dispense the psychoactive drugs and other medications the patients take each day.
Read more: https://www.timesunion.com/news/article/Residents-guards-say-Marcy-psychiatric-center-is-15200056.php
I_UndergroundPanther
(12,901 posts)And after what happened to me,and others I hope they all die.
LisaM
(28,549 posts)In fact, it doesn't say any of them are.
Rhiannon12866
(221,193 posts)My patient was a young teen autistic boy and he improved during the half year that we worked with him. There were 3 of us who regularly visited him and I was kinda flattered that mine was the one name he remembered. And he actually spoke to me once about the abuse he'd received at home - just a sentence - and I reported it. Other than that, he wasn't all that communicative. Apparently, other students had worked with him before and he'd improve for awhile.
It was kinda creepy since the ward we visited was in lockdown, so we'd have to ring to be let in and we'd hear a chorus of voices saying "come in!" There was one time when Michael (his name) got really upset and they took him away in a straitjacket. There was a blood drive at the college that day and they initially wouldn't take me because my pulse was too rapid, took me awhile to figure out why.
We visited the general population, but there was one guy in my class who visited the ward where the criminally insane were incarcerated. He told me about it once and I recognized many of the names from the news. I realize that things changed after my time there when Reagan "emptied the institutions." But I did get the impression that those who worked in the ward that we visited did care about the patients. A male nurse who worked on our ward was personal friends with my other "patient" - an agoraphobic woman who we visited in her home and who did extremely well - and he was the one who said he'd make a point into looking into Michael's case based on what he'd told me. *sigh*
PoindexterOglethorpe
(26,608 posts)My mother was a nurse there from about 1957-1962. A very, very long time ago.