WCM part 5

Emergency / Urgent Care Topics in Correctional Medicine

A major part of correctional medicine is same-day triage. You will constantly evaluate patients with acute complaints and decide:

  • Is this stable enough to manage here?
  • Does this need observation?
  • Does this need EMS and emergency department transfer immediately?

This is one of the most important correctional medicine skills.

Unlike a hospital, you usually do not have:

  • CT immediately available
  • stat specialty consults
  • full telemetry
  • rapid imaging
  • ICU backup

Because of this, your ability to recognize dangerous presentations early matters enormously.

The key correctional medicine question is:
“What can safely stay here?”
“What must go to the ED now?”

You do not need to become an emergency medicine physician, but you absolutely must recognize:

  • instability
  • red flags
  • time-sensitive emergencies
  • high-risk presentations
  • situations that cannot safely be managed in the facility

A major danger in corrections is becoming desensitized because patients frequently present with vague complaints, anxiety, somatic symptoms, or manipulation. Serious emergencies still occur, and you cannot afford to miss them.


1. Chest Pain

One of the highest-risk complaints in correctional medicine.

Never dismiss chest pain automatically as:

  • anxiety
  • panic attack
  • drug seeking
  • malingering

Life-threatening causes you must consider

  • acute coronary syndrome (ACS)
  • pulmonary embolism
  • aortic dissection
  • pneumothorax
  • cocaine-associated vasospasm
  • severe pneumonia

Initial Assessment

Know how to rapidly assess:

  • vitals
  • oxygen saturation
  • mental status
  • appearance
  • diaphoresis
  • respiratory distress

Important history

Ask:

  • onset
  • exertional component
  • radiation
  • shortness of breath
  • nausea
  • diaphoresis
  • cocaine/stimulant use
  • prior cardiac history

High-Risk Features

Immediate ED transfer for:

  • hypotension
  • hypoxia
  • diaphoresis
  • altered mental status
  • ECG changes
  • persistent severe pain
  • syncope
  • neurologic symptoms

Important Correctional Considerations

Cocaine use

Very important.

Cocaine can cause:

  • vasospasm
  • MI
  • arrhythmias
  • severe hypertension

Do not dismiss chest pain in stimulant users.


Common Low-Risk Causes

You will also see:

  • musculoskeletal pain
  • GERD
  • anxiety/panic attacks

But these are diagnoses of exclusion in high-risk patients.


2. Shortness of Breath

Potentially life-threatening.

Dangerous causes

Always think about:

  • asthma/COPD exacerbation
  • PE
  • pneumonia
  • CHF
  • pneumothorax
  • overdose
  • sepsis
  • anaphylaxis

Rapid Assessment

Assess:

  • respiratory rate
  • oxygen saturation
  • work of breathing
  • mental status
  • ability to speak

Immediate red flags

  • cyanosis
  • inability to speak full sentences
  • altered mental status
  • severe hypoxia
  • exhaustion

These require emergency escalation.


Important Correctional Scenarios

Asthma

Very common.

Know:

  • wheezing
  • bronchodilator basics
  • steroid basics

Anxiety vs real respiratory illness

Never assume panic attack without considering:

  • PE
  • asthma
  • ACS
  • pneumonia

Opioid overdose

Know:

  • respiratory depression
  • pinpoint pupils
  • hypoxia

Naloxone familiarity is essential.


3. Abdominal Pain

Very common and often difficult.

Many benign complaints occur in corrections:

  • constipation
  • GERD
  • anxiety-related symptoms

But surgical emergencies also occur.


Dangerous Diagnoses

Do not miss:

  • appendicitis
  • bowel obstruction
  • perforation
  • ectopic pregnancy
  • cholecystitis
  • pancreatitis
  • GI bleed
  • sepsis

Important Assessment Areas

Ask about:

  • vomiting
  • fever
  • bowel movements
  • urinary symptoms
  • pregnancy possibility
  • bleeding
  • substance use

Assess:

  • guarding
  • rebound
  • distention
  • rigidity

Important Correctional Issues

Constipation

Very common due to:

  • poor diet
  • dehydration
  • opioids
  • inactivity
  • psychiatric medications

Drug withdrawal

Can also cause abdominal complaints.


Red Flags

Transfer urgently for:

  • rigid abdomen
  • rebound tenderness
  • persistent vomiting
  • GI bleeding
  • hypotension
  • fever + severe pain
  • pregnancy concerns
  • altered mental status

4. Syncope

Potentially very dangerous.

Key question

Was it true syncope or something else?

Could it be:

  • seizure
  • intoxication
  • psychogenic event
  • overdose

Dangerous Causes

Know:

  • arrhythmia
  • PE
  • GI bleed
  • severe dehydration
  • ectopic pregnancy
  • stroke
  • hypoglycemia

High-Risk Features

Urgent evaluation for:

  • exertional syncope
  • chest pain
  • palpitations
  • abnormal vitals
  • head injury
  • persistent confusion
  • neurologic deficits

Important Correctional Issues

Withdrawal

Alcohol or benzodiazepine withdrawal may contribute.

Dehydration

Common during withdrawal or illness.

Medication effects

Psych meds and antihypertensives may cause orthostasis.


5. Headache Red Flags

Most headaches are benign.
But some are emergencies.


Dangerous Headache Causes

Do not miss:

  • subarachnoid hemorrhage
  • meningitis
  • stroke
  • intracranial hemorrhage
  • hypertensive emergency
  • mass lesions

Red Flag Symptoms

Immediate escalation for:

  • “worst headache of life”
  • sudden onset thunderclap headache
  • fever + neck stiffness
  • focal neurologic deficits
  • altered mental status
  • papilledema
  • immunocompromised patients
  • head trauma

Important Correctional Considerations

Trauma

Assaults and falls occur.

Withdrawal

Alcohol withdrawal can cause severe headaches.

Hypertension

Very elevated BP plus neuro symptoms is concerning.


Migraine vs Dangerous Headache

Migraines are common.
But never anchor too quickly.

Always assess:

  • neuro deficits
  • mental status
  • infection signs

6. Stroke Symptoms

Time-sensitive emergency.

You must recognize stroke rapidly.


Symptoms

Know:

  • facial droop
  • unilateral weakness
  • speech difficulty
  • vision changes
  • severe imbalance
  • sudden confusion

Important Principle

Even mild symptoms can represent stroke.

Do not delay transfer because symptoms “seem small.”


Common Correctional Risk Factors

Many incarcerated patients have:

  • smoking history
  • hypertension
  • stimulant use
  • diabetes
  • poor preventive care

Stroke Mimics

Could also be:

  • hypoglycemia
  • intoxication
  • Bell palsy
  • migraine
  • conversion disorder

But do not assume mimic without evaluation.


7. Sepsis

One of the deadliest emergencies you may encounter.

Sources

Common sources:

  • pneumonia
  • skin infections
  • UTI
  • endocarditis
  • abdominal infection

Warning Signs

Know:

  • fever or hypothermia
  • tachycardia
  • hypotension
  • altered mental status
  • tachypnea

Important Correctional Considerations

IV drug use

Raises risk of:

  • bacteremia
  • endocarditis
  • abscesses

Delayed presentation

Patients may minimize symptoms or have poor health literacy.


Red Flags

Transfer urgently for:

  • hypotension
  • confusion
  • severe tachycardia
  • respiratory distress
  • suspected bacteremia

8. GI Bleed

Potentially fatal.

Symptoms

Know:

  • hematemesis
  • melena
  • hematochezia
  • dizziness
  • syncope

High-Risk Causes

  • peptic ulcer disease
  • liver disease
  • varices
  • gastritis
  • anticoagulation

Important Correctional Overlap

Many patients have:

  • alcohol use disorder
  • hepatitis C
  • cirrhosis
  • NSAID overuse

Red Flags

Urgent transfer for:

  • hypotension
  • tachycardia
  • active bleeding
  • altered mental status
  • severe anemia symptoms

9. Pregnancy Emergencies

Even if you are not practicing OB/GYN, you must recognize dangerous pregnancy-related presentations.

Never assume pregnancy is impossible.


Emergencies You Must Consider

Ectopic pregnancy

Potentially fatal.

Symptoms:

  • abdominal pain
  • vaginal bleeding
  • syncope
  • hypotension

Miscarriage complications

Know:

  • heavy bleeding
  • fever
  • retained products concerns

Preeclampsia/Eclampsia

Especially important.

Symptoms:

  • severe hypertension
  • headache
  • visual changes
  • seizures

Important Correctional Principle

Any reproductive-age woman with:

  • abdominal pain
  • syncope
  • vaginal bleeding

needs pregnancy consideration.


The Core Correctional Emergency Medicine Skill:

Triage Judgment

This is the most important concept.

You constantly decide:

  • Can this safely stay in the facility?
  • Does this need monitoring?
  • Does this require ED transfer now?

What Can Often Stay in Facility

Examples:

  • mild viral illness
  • uncomplicated musculoskeletal pain
  • stable chronic headaches
  • mild anxiety symptoms
  • uncomplicated constipation

Provided:

  • vitals stable
  • exam reassuring
  • follow-up available

What Usually Needs ED Transfer

  • unstable vitals
  • altered mental status
  • neurologic deficits
  • respiratory distress
  • severe chest pain
  • GI bleeding
  • severe abdominal findings
  • sepsis concern
  • pregnancy emergencies
  • overdose
  • severe withdrawal

Important Correctional Emergency Medicine Themes

Patients may underreport symptoms

Some fear transfer.
Some distrust healthcare.
Some minimize illness.


Patients may exaggerate symptoms

Some seek:

  • housing changes
  • secondary gain
  • medications

Remain objective.


Avoid cynicism

The biggest danger is assuming:

  • “they’re faking”
  • “it’s anxiety”
  • “it’s behavioral”

Eventually that mindset misses real emergencies.


Documentation Matters

Document:

  • vitals
  • mental status
  • exam findings
  • decision-making
  • reassessment
  • why transfer was or was not done

Correctional medicine is highly medicolegally sensitive.


The Best Correctional Physicians

The strongest correctional GPs:

  • stay calm
  • recognize instability quickly
  • avoid overreacting to minor complaints
  • avoid underreacting to dangerous complaints
  • reassess frequently
  • communicate clearly with nursing staff
  • document carefully
  • know their limits

You are practicing medicine in a resource-limited environment where triage judgment is one of the most valuable clinical skills you can develop.