Sepsis is 'very treatable.' For inmates, it's often a death sentence. [View all]
Locked in a segregation cell at a county jail in Oklahoma, Terral Ellis Jr. begged for his inhaler, his voice raspy and desperate.
I think Im dying, the 26-year-old father pleaded through the door.
Surveillance camera footage shows the jail nurse sauntered over to his cell, clearly exasperated. There aint a damn thing f------ wrong with you, she snapped, before slamming the door shut. A nearby inmate cracked a joke about the boy who cried wolf.
By the time paramedics arrived hours later, Ellis was barely conscious. He died that day from septic shock brought on by pneumonia an infection he could have survived, if treated earlier.
Ellis story repeats itself hundreds of times each year in jails and prisons scattered from coast to coast. Arrests for infractions as minor as trespassing or a missed probation meeting turn into death sentences when correctional facilities delay or deny medical care that inmates need. Grieving families then sue for millions, often leaving taxpayers to foot the bill.
https://www.usatoday.com/story/news/investigations/2025/11/20/sepsis-deaths-lawsuits-prisons-jails-infection-investigation/85755243007/
WARNING: Hot button issue! The attitude of that jail nurse is what is wrong with a lot of prison medical maltreatment., which I saw WAY too much of in my 30-year nursing career. Many jails/prisons hire LPNs, who aren't qualified for the work they do, doctors whose credentials may be on the shady side, etc,---and I suspect that the lower down the ladder, the worse it is because the pay scale is so low.