WCM part 1

General Internal Medicine & Ambulatory Care for Correctional Medicine

This is the core of correctional primary care. Most of your day will not involve rare diseases. Instead, it will involve managing common chronic illnesses in patients with fragmented healthcare, poor medication access, trauma histories, psychiatric disease, substance use disorders, and inconsistent prior follow-up.

A large portion of correctional medicine is:

  • rebuilding outpatient care
  • restarting interrupted medications
  • determining what is actually necessary
  • identifying who is sick versus who is stable
  • preventing emergencies through routine care

1. Hypertension

What you need to know

Hypertension is one of the most common conditions you will treat.

You should know:

  • diagnostic thresholds
  • hypertensive urgency vs emergency
  • first-line medications
  • resistant hypertension
  • medication side effects
  • CKD/diabetes considerations
  • pregnancy-safe agents basics

Common correctional scenarios

  • “I haven’t had my meds in 3 weeks.”
  • Patient does not know medication names.
  • Multiple duplicate medications.
  • BP elevated from withdrawal, anxiety, or pain.
  • Poor diet history before incarceration.
  • Nonadherence due to cost prior to incarceration.

First-line medications

You should be comfortable with:

  • amlodipine
  • lisinopril
  • losartan
  • hydrochlorothiazide
  • chlorthalidone

Know:

  • ACE inhibitor cough
  • hyperkalemia
  • edema from calcium channel blockers
  • thiazide electrolyte abnormalities

Key practical points

  • Avoid overreacting to isolated elevated BPs.
  • Recheck manually if severely elevated.
  • Assess symptoms carefully.
  • Most asymptomatic hypertension is not an emergency.
  • Correctional settings often create anxiety-related BP elevations.

Emergencies you cannot miss

  • chest pain
  • neuro deficits
  • pulmonary edema
  • papilledema
  • encephalopathy
  • acute kidney injury

2. Diabetes

Core areas

You should understand:

  • Type 2 diabetes management
  • insulin basics
  • hypoglycemia management
  • diabetic complications
  • sick-day management
  • A1c targets
  • diabetic foot care

Common correctional problems

  • Patients arrive without insulin.
  • Unclear insulin regimens.
  • Poor nutrition history.
  • Severe uncontrolled diabetes.
  • Peripheral neuropathy.
  • Chronic wounds.
  • Medication hoarding or trading.

Medications to know well

Metformin

  • first-line
  • GI side effects
  • renal considerations

GLP-1 agonists

  • semaglutide
  • tirzepatide
    Useful but sometimes difficult logistically in corrections.

SGLT2 inhibitors

Know:

  • genital infections
  • dehydration risk
  • euglycemic DKA

Insulin

You need practical insulin knowledge:

  • basal vs bolus
  • correction scales
  • hypoglycemia treatment
  • when not to aggressively correct glucose

Emergencies

Know how to recognize:

  • DKA
  • HHS
  • severe hypoglycemia

Important correctional issue

Food timing matters enormously with insulin administration. Coordination with nursing and meal schedules is critical.


3. Hyperlipidemia

This is mostly preventive medicine.

Know:

  • ASCVD risk
  • statin intensity
  • secondary prevention
  • diabetes indications
  • statin side effects

Statins you should know

  • atorvastatin
  • rosuvastatin
  • simvastatin

Practical issues

Many incarcerated patients have:

  • no prior preventive care
  • untreated cardiovascular risk factors
  • smoking history
  • obesity
  • diabetes

Key point

A huge amount of correctional medicine is simply restarting evidence-based outpatient medicine that was interrupted.


4. Obesity

Obesity is extremely common.

Areas to know

  • BMI classification
  • metabolic syndrome
  • nutrition counseling
  • exercise counseling
  • obesity complications
  • medication-associated weight gain

Important overlap

Obesity frequently coexists with:

  • diabetes
  • hypertension
  • sleep apnea
  • depression
  • chronic pain

Correctional realities

Exercise opportunities vary by facility.
Dietary control may be limited.
Psychiatric medications often worsen weight gain.

Medications

Know basics of:

  • GLP-1 agonists
  • contraindications
  • GI side effects

5. Smoking Cessation

Smoking prevalence in corrections is extremely high.

Know:

  • nicotine replacement therapy
  • varenicline
  • bupropion
  • counseling approaches
  • relapse prevention

Practical issues

Many patients:

  • smoke heavily before incarceration
  • use nicotine as stress management
  • have COPD/asthma overlap
  • have vascular disease

Counseling strategy

Avoid lecturing.
Use motivational interviewing:

  • “What do you think smoking is doing to your breathing?”
  • “Have you thought about cutting back?”

6. Preventive Care

Preventive care is a major opportunity in corrections because many patients had little consistent healthcare before incarceration.

Important areas

Know screening and prevention for:

  • hypertension
  • diabetes
  • lipids
  • colon cancer
  • breast cancer
  • cervical cancer basics
  • osteoporosis
  • depression
  • substance use

Key correctional reality

Incarceration is often the first stable healthcare access many patients have had in years.

You can significantly improve long-term health outcomes.


7. Vaccinations

This is extremely important in congregate settings.

Know routine adult vaccines

  • influenza
  • COVID
  • Tdap
  • pneumococcal
  • hepatitis A
  • hepatitis B
  • shingles
  • HPV basics

High-yield correctional considerations

Higher prevalence of:

  • hepatitis exposure
  • smoking
  • chronic illness
  • substance use

Vaccination rates are often poor before incarceration.

Outbreak prevention matters

Correctional facilities are high-risk environments for:

  • influenza
  • COVID
  • hepatitis
  • TB exposure

8. Chronic Pain

One of the hardest areas in correctional medicine.

Common complaints

  • back pain
  • fibromyalgia
  • arthritis
  • neuropathy
  • headaches
  • chronic abdominal pain

Key challenge

You must:

  • treat pain respectfully
  • avoid unsafe prescribing
  • recognize substance use history
  • avoid escalation battles

High-yield medications

Know:

  • acetaminophen
  • NSAIDs
  • duloxetine
  • gabapentin
  • pregabalin
  • topical agents

Opioids

Correctional systems are usually very cautious with opioids.

You should understand:

  • opioid dependence
  • hyperalgesia
  • withdrawal
  • diversion risk

Red flags you cannot miss

  • cauda equina symptoms
  • fever + back pain
  • focal neuro deficits
  • cancer symptoms
  • spinal epidural abscess risk

9. Polypharmacy

Many incarcerated patients arrive on very long medication lists.

Your job

Determine:

  • what is necessary
  • what is duplicate
  • what is dangerous
  • what was never helping

Common problems

  • duplicate antihypertensives
  • multiple sedating medications
  • unnecessary supplements
  • benzodiazepines
  • anticholinergic burden

High-risk combinations

Watch for:

  • opioids + benzos
  • multiple QT-prolonging drugs
  • excessive sedation
  • serotonin syndrome risk

Important skill

Medication reconciliation is one of the most valuable correctional medicine skills.


10. Medication Adherence

This is one of the biggest themes in correctional medicine.

Why patients stop meds

Before incarceration:

  • cost
  • homelessness
  • addiction
  • transportation issues
  • psychiatric illness
  • poor health literacy

Your approach

Avoid assuming laziness or “noncompliance.”

Instead ask:

  • “What made it difficult to take the medication?”
  • “Did you have side effects?”
  • “Were you able to afford it?”

Practical correctional issues

Some patients:

  • exaggerate medication histories
  • cannot remember medications
  • trade medications
  • hoard medications

You must balance skepticism with compassion.


11. Screening Guidelines

You do not need subspecialty-level preventive medicine knowledge, but you should know the basics well.

High-yield screening areas

Colon cancer

Know:

  • age ranges
  • FIT testing
  • colonoscopy indications

Breast cancer

Know:

  • mammography basics
  • evaluation of breast masses

Cervical cancer

Even if you are not doing OB/GYN, know:

  • Pap screening basics
  • HPV concepts
  • red flag bleeding symptoms

Lung cancer

Know:

  • smoking history criteria
  • low-dose CT basics

Osteoporosis

Very relevant in women:

  • postmenopausal risk
  • steroid exposure
  • fracture prevention

Depression & suicide screening

Extremely important in corrections.


The Real Core of Correctional Ambulatory Medicine

The actual day-to-day work often looks like this:

“I ran out of meds.”

You determine:

  • what they were really taking
  • whether they need all of it
  • whether it is safe to restart
  • whether withdrawal risk exists

Uncontrolled chronic disease

You will frequently see:

  • A1c >10
  • untreated hypertension
  • severe hyperlipidemia
  • advanced smoking-related disease

Much of your job is gradual stabilization.


Poor follow-up before incarceration

Many patients had:

  • fragmented care
  • ED-only medicine
  • missed appointments
  • unstable housing
  • addiction issues

You are often rebuilding a primary care system from scratch.


Restarting long-term care

This is a major skill.

You need to know:

  • which medications can safely restart immediately
  • which require caution
  • which require monitoring
  • which should not be restarted

Examples:

  • restart antihypertensives carefully
  • avoid abrupt benzo continuation without evaluation
  • verify insulin regimens
  • reassess chronic opioid therapy

What Makes a Strong Correctional GP

The best correctional physicians:

  • stay calm
  • are efficient
  • document carefully
  • avoid ego conflicts
  • recognize emergencies early
  • communicate clearly
  • maintain boundaries
  • treat patients respectfully
  • understand trauma and addiction
  • provide consistent care

You are practicing outpatient internal medicine in a highly structured, psychologically complex environment. Consistency, judgment, and practicality matter more than encyclopedic subspecialty knowledge.