
Oklahoma Senate Bill 686: Hospice Care Work Program
Senate Bill 686, Authored by Senator McCourtney

Overview and Purpose
End of life care is something many people need in order to die with dignity – including Oklahomans who are incarcerated. The Department of Corrections already has a work program that allows eligible incarcerated people to care for other incarcerated persons who need end-of-life care. This is a valuable program that gives important work experience, however, these individuals currently have no path to job certification before or upon their release.
A New Program
A new law seeks to empower the State Department of Health, the Department of Corrections, and the State Department of Careers and Technology to operate a certified nurse’s aid program that will pre-qualify applicants to receive required job training in end of life care while incarcerated. This training would apply towards occupational certification pre or post-release.
The building blocks for this program already exist, but there is no statute which enables the pre-certification process. A new statute will give the above agencies the framework they need to allow for the pre-qualification of applicants, job training, and the certification process.
This program seeks to build on the success of other carceral work programs which help remove barriers to job certification, ease reentry stress, and ultimately can reduce recidivism rates for those transitioning to the community.
Frequently Asked Questions
Do inmates provide end-of-life care to each other now?
Yes. This work assignment is already available for qualifying inmates inside Oklahoma prisons.
Will this put hospice patients in danger of being abused?
No. These inmates who will be released and qualify for the Nurse Aide certification will not be able to have any of the barrier offenses, and will be treated like any other applicant to the certification program currently.
2 thoughts on “Oklahoma Senate Bill 686: Hospice Care Work Program”
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So what is actually being done to meet the
“Hospice” requirements? A nurse’s aide is not legally allowed to give medications, it’s out of their scope of practice. Are you calling it Hospice to just place someone there to assist with the patient’s ADL’s (Activity of daily living)? Although that is very much needed, what about the pain, anxiety, terminal agitation and increased secretions, who is managing those things? I was just wondering, I have done Hospice Case Management for 14 years, and I am praying that the latter that I listed are being addressed and met because everyone has the right to die with dignity and comfortably. Thank you.
Hi Lisa, those issues are handled by the Registered Nurse(s) who work in the facilities.