Kevin "Rashid" Johnson: My Cancer Diagnosis and the Disease of Denied Prison Medical Care, & Call for Action
On July 1, 2022 I was informed by a prison doctor here at Virginia’s Nottoway Correctional (sic!) Center (NCC) that I had tested positive for prostate cancer.
This diagnosis came after I had been left for months by NCC medical staff with known blood test results showing that my PSA (prostate specific analysis) levels were extremely high, evidencing likely prostate-related illness. This delay in follow-up testing and treatment left the cancer to develop or advance beyond stages at which it might have been less serious.
FIRST SIGNS
My PSA levels were first tested on October 8, 2021, at which time the reading was 14.3, way above a 4 which is considered the ‘normal’ level. My PSA level was tested as part of routine blood tests that I receive biannually, as part of my ongoing treatment for chronic hypertension. The prison doctor recognized the reading to be abnormal and told me as much when he saw me a few days after the blood tests for my routine hypertension checkup. He ordered a follow-up PSA test to determine if the results were correct or a “fluke,” because, according to him the PSA tests sometimes come back with erroneous elevated readings. He told me he would see me again after this second test to discuss the results.
A follow-up blood test was administered on November 10, 2021. I would later discover that this reading came back even higher, at 14.6. The doctor never saw me again.
SECOND SIGNS
My next regularly scheduled hypertension-related blood tests were taken six months later. My PSA levels came back again at 14.6. A few days later I was seen by the chronic care nurse named Bendyl for my routine hypertension checkup. At that time she told me that my PSA levels were extremely high, and had been when I was seen on chronic care six months before. She expressed concern that I had not been sent immediately out to a urology clinic for examination and testing, after the abnormal PSA test results six months before. I mentioned that this was clear malpractice. In response she assured me that she would have me promptly seen by a urologist.
TESTING AND DIAGNOSIS
On March 22, 2022 I was taken out of the prison to a urologist for initial consultation, and scheduled for an MRI and biopsy. The MRI was performed on May 26, 2022. I was told nothing about the results by NCC medical staff, so filed a complaint within the prison. In response I was told I would be seen on sick call that week. I was not seen.
I was then taken out to the Medical College of Virginia on June 23, 2022 to receive a biopsy. At that time hospital staff told me the results of the May 26 MRI. I was told that it showed a “spot” in my prostate that might be cancer. This area, they explained, would be targeted in the biopsy along with other random areas. 13 specimens were taken from my prostate during the biopsy.
I was able to speak to NCC doctor named York, not the doctor who saw me in 2021, while I was in the medical department a few days after my biopsy. This was a chance meeting, where he happened to walk past me going on his lunch break and I stopped him to raise concerns about my possible condition and lack of prompt care.
He immediately acknowledged that from my description, my situation had not been properly addressed and committed to look into it. He also assured that he would have me brought to the medical department a week later by which time the biopsy results should be available which he would share with me.
On July 1, 2022 Dr. York called me to the medical department and read the biopsy results to me. It was found that 11 of the 13 specimens taken from my prostate showed positive for cancer. Also that I suffered prostatitis. But for my chance encounter with him the week before no one would have told me of my diagnosis. And had I not pressed the issue with nurse Bendyl during my April 2022 hypertension chronic care visit, I may never have been sent to a urologist for testing and diagnosis.
A CANCEROUS PRISON SYSTEM
This is typical of prison medical departments. On a routine basis prisoners are left to suffer, deteriorate and die from lack of care or from substandard care. I’ve written about this condition in relation to other prisoners many times over the years, in the many prisons and prison systems I have been confined to. My acute awareness of this disregard for our health needs is one reason I am extremely vocal and vigilant in pressing officials to address and follow up on my and others’ medical care needs.
This is but another layer of the inhumanity that inheres in the U.S. mass imprisonment system, which demands that this system be razed to the ground and that one oriented to healing people be erected by the people in its place.
Dare to Struggle Dare to Win!
All Power to the People!
The above text by revolutionary prisoner Kevin "Rashid" Johnson, author of the books Panther Vision and Defying the Tomb, has been reposted from his website rashidmod.com.
We are urging people to contact the following prison officials and urge that he begin treatment immediately. The following text can be used when calling or emailing in. It has been written by a comrade who also has cancer and is in touch with many friends who do as well, at Rashid’s request:
“My name is _______________________. My friend Kevin Johnson, #1007485, housed at Nottoway, just learned from the prison doctor that he has prostate cancer. Tests he took last October and November indicated that diagnosis almost certainly, but no biopsy was performed until April and the results reported to him on July 1. Eleven of 13 biopsies are positive for prostate cancer.
“Cancer kills, and it can kill fast. A friend with prostate cancer says his treatment started immediately upon diagnosis in an effort to stop the cancer from spreading to his lymph nodes and on to his bones, where it would be fatal. The Virginia Department of Corrections has already failed in its responsibility to provide even minimal care. Mr. Johnson’s thousands of supporters are shocked to hear of these inexcusably long delays in diagnosis. The best possible treatment must begin now. No obstacle must be allowed to cause further delay.”
Personalize the message if you can, and send it to the following authorities:
Director of the Virginia Department of Corrections
Harold W. Clarke
VADOC
P.O. Box 26963
Richmond, VA 23261
(804) 674-3000
docmail@vadoc.virginia.gov
Director of Health Services, VADOC
Steve Herrick
healthservicesinquiries@vadoc.virginia.gov
(804) 887-8118
Warden Clint Davis
Nottoway Correctional Center
2892 Schutt Rd.
Burkeville, VA 23922
(434) 767-5543