Want to Fix Prison Healthcare? Address High Turnover Rates

In any field, experience matters. That’s why high turnover is always cause for concern.

Imagine a McDonalds. Making hamburgers is not rocket science, and yet if there are not enough staff members who understand the processes McDonalds uses, the whole system will fall apart. Constantly training new employees is a drain on resources, and if a threshold level of trained employees is not maintained, the business simply can’t function. 

Unfortunately, a legislative audit report shows that this is exactly what is happening in Utah’s prisons. Medical staff especially have seen high levels of turnover. EMTs — trained to provide emergency care — have been hired as a cheaper alternative to medical professionals with more training. In 2022, there was a 97 percent EMT turnover rate at the prison. Registered nurses saw a 57 percent turnover rate. 

Perhaps then it is no wonder that the report also details a “culture of noncompliance” in healthcare delivery. In an environment of so much turnover, too few employees are fully trained for compliance to even be possible. Supervisors cannot be with new hires constantly, and peer employees cannot model procedures they themselves do not know. 

Not surprisingly, this has contributed to inadequate provision of healthcare in the prison system. A 2021 Legislative Audit found that inappropriate or inadequate medical care was given in about 17 percent of cases.

Although there are multiple facets to the shortcomings in prison healthcare, employee turnover is certainly a contributing factor and will have to be addressed if healthcare outcomes are to improve. 

Author Profile Image
About the author

Amy Pomeroy

Amy has spent the last several years prosecuting crime as a Deputy Utah County Attorney, giving her a front-row seat to what is and is not working in our criminal justice system. Prior to that, she worked at the Pacific Legal Foundation doing constitutional litigation and ran a state representative’s office. She received her bachelor’s degree in political science from Brigham Young University before graduating from J. Reuben Clark Law School cum laude. She lives in Orem with her husband and their three energetic children and enjoys woodworking and being outdoors.

Share Post:

Fighting for a Future Where Individuals Are Fully Liberated to Pursue Their Dreams, Free from Coercion and Control.

You Might Also Like

The GUARD Act would ban AI for teens instead of trusting parents to guide them. You can't build a wondrous future on a foundation of fear.
Bitcoin has fallen more than 50% from its 2025 all time high. Still, the conditions that gave Bitcoin and cryptocurrencies a use case in the first place have not changed.
A new audit on the Utah Fits All scholarship found purchases auditors called “wasteful and extravagant.” But the audit does not measure why the program exists.

Help us Nail and Scale Policies to Reduce Government Control

Your tax-deductible contributions to Libertas Institute increase freedom across the country.