• Carson Now on Facebook
  • Follow Carson Now on Twitter
  • Follow Carson Now by RSS
  • Follow Carson Now by Email

Prison reform advocate to speak at Democratic luncheon

Event Date: 
March 6, 2023 - 1:00pm

The featured speaker at Monday's Democratic luncheon will be Karen Gedney MD, author of 30 Years Behind Bars: Trials of a Prison Doctor. Dr Gedney is an internal medicine specialist who spent almost three decades as a physician in Nevada's correctional system. Today she is an outspoken advocate for Holistic Prison Reform.

Unusual circumstances brought Dr. Gedney to a career that quickly became a calling. She was awarded a Health Corps scholarship for her medical degree that she earned from the University of Cincinnati Medical School and her residency, which was completed at the University of Nevada, Reno. However, the scholarship required that she complete four years of service in an underserved area. She was given the choice between Cabrini-Green, a public housing complex in Chicago, or the Northern Nevada Corrections Center in Carson City. The latter didn’t require Gedney and her husband to relocate.

“I got a call from Carolyn Ford at the National Health Corps telling me that prisons were in dire need of medical personnel. At the time, I was finishing my residency, and serving as a doctor in a prison wasn’t even on my radar,” she said. “I looked at the phone in my hand and thought: so I’m going to prison for the next four years.” Yet, for this young medical professional with the belief that nearly everyone has the ability to change, the assignment would present her with challenges she wouldn’t have fathomed.

The Northern Nevada Corrections Center was a mere 20-minute drive from Gedney’s home, and she remembers, “When I turned onto the prison road I was entering a different world.” Indeed, as Nevada’s first female prison doctor, Gedney was entering uncharted territory. Feeling initially like a fish out of water, Gedney found herself without direction or guidance.

The Medical Director was on extended leave and no one seemed to know when he would return. When he did return, she learned that he was terminally ill with cancer. “When the Medical Director died, I was thrown into an alien world. I had never had any kind of supervision or training. Others started asking me to make policy decisions at a state level, something I wasn’t really prepared to do. And, in the prison itself, a lot of people saw me as a threat because I didn’t share their mentality of locking the prisoners away and forgetting about them.”

Instead, Gedney — who was known as “Dr. G” — treated the inmates as patients. This might seem like an obvious thing to do, but within the prison walls, it was revolutionary. “So many of the inmates made an impression,” said Dr. G, who kept a journal and all the cards and notes the inmates have given her over the years, which later became the material for her memoir. The stories she tells are many, and it’s hard to nail down just one. “In life, one can experience situations that bring out the best or the worst in people. Prison is one of those unique places,” she said.

In 2018, Nevada got the record for holding an innocent woman behind bars for the longest amount of time. Cathy Woods, who is mentally ill, was sentenced twice, once in 1980 and again in 1985, to a life sentence for a crime she didn’t commit. According to a story that ran in the Los Angeles Times, she was released in 2016 “and walked out the prison door with a few belongings, memories of electroshock therapy and suicide attempts, including setting herself on fire.” The last, an injury that Gedney treated during her service as a prison doctor.

Currently, Nevada has the highest incarceration rate in the United States, with 763 inmates per 100,000 population, whereas the incarceration rate for the country is 698 per 100,000. Of those 13,000 inmates in Nevada’s prisons, 1,200 currently have parole, which means that 10% of that population could leave to an approved transitional program. The problem: there are not many of these kinds of programs to meet the state’s needs.

More startling, of the parolees who are released, 57% will return to prison due to a technical violation. They haven’t committed another crime, but nonetheless will continue to reside behind bars. This, said Gedney, is a problem. And it's why we need a more holistic approach to prison reform. “I want to shift awareness from the old paradigm in corrections premised on punishment, harm and recidivism to a medical model that focuses on prevention, healing, and reintegration. Prisons aren’t known as inspiring places. They can grind a person down and destroy them.”

The impact of incarceration goes beyond the individual, impacting families and communities. Children who have a parent in prison have emotional trauma from their disrupted family life that is often accompanied by compromised mental health, social interactions, and educational opportunities. “It can destroy a family,” said Gedney who, through the non-profit Big Brothers Big Sisters of Northern Nevada, has mentored five children from families where at least one parent is incarcerated. The three older children have moved on to college and are focusing on positive futures. The two younger children are “...works in progress. But this kind of work makes you realize that you can change the trajectory of the generations to come,” she said. “People just need to realize they can be a part of the solution.”

Her experiences in the prison and as a mentor illustrate the many reasons why Gedney is compelled to speak out about holistic prison reform. “The criminal justice system and the medical field mess up in the same way. They both start by trying to fix things by throwing money at the tail end of a problem. They blame the person who is set up for failure. Instead, we need a prevention piece to keep people from ending up in prison in the first place, a healing piece on the inside so prisoners can gain skills and a reintegration piece so they can quickly become an asset to society.”

Gedney’s memoir, 30 Years Behind Bars: Trials of a Prison Doctor, was published in 2018, and in addition to recounting her long tenure as a prison doctor — which is rife with conflict and challenge — also articulates Gedney’s personal growth that was a result of her work there. Perhaps the most harrowing scene happens early in the book when she is taken hostage and assaulted by an inmate who was known as “Moth.” The ordeal, which lasted 10 hours, ended when deputies tossed a “flash-and-bang” concussion grenade into her 12-by-12 foot office, and then killed the inmate. Despite what had happened to her, Gedney returned to work the next day.

“I had German parents who taught me that if you fall out of the tree, you get back up and play. It never occurred to me to be a victim or to soothe myself because something bad had happened,” she said. “ I had a lot of anger, though, some of it at myself because I had let that happen, some at the custody officers who’d let him in with a knife and all his provisions, and anger for the inmate for what he did.” That anger erupted during a training session on bloodborne pathogens, when Gedney told the new officers that the absolute worst thing to do was to let workplace trauma go unnoticed. After that, her story became an integral part of the training.

It was also a moment that sparked reflection. “At the time I was 32 and a doctor. I would survive. But when you’re only 7 and something like that happens to you and you don’t have any supports? I worked with the Nevada Board of Parole member Robin Bates on a project, and he told me that 99% of the female parolees that come before the board have been physically, emotionally and sexually abused at some point in their lives.” In many ways, this is the thread that runs throughout the chapters of Gedney’s book: the capacity of human beings to heal if they have the right support from the people around them, and if they choose to do the necessary work.

According to a Nevada Department of Corrections, 58% of inmates come to prison without a high school diploma and more than 78% come with only minimal job training. For these reasons, Gedney took part in, and led, several support groups that helped to prepare the inmates for lives beyond prison walls by teaching skills that they could use on the outside. These groups included Gedney’s Health-Related Recovery (HRR) group that taught life skills, a Toastmasters group, among several others.

“When I trained to be a doctor, I didn't realize that the word comes from the Latin verb ‘docere’, which means ‘to teach.’ In prison, I found that I loved teaching patients and inmates what they needed to know in order to heal and thrive.” Her book is filled with examples of healing: of men finding healthy hobbies, careers and vocations, leaving the prison ready to begin new lives. Believing in their capacity to change their lives for the better. That was the key to their success. “Many people, especially the ones in custody, believe that people can’t change,” she said. “I choose to believe they can.”

Sponsored by the Democratic Men's Committee, this event is scheduled for 1:00 PM on Monday, March 6th, and may be attended in person at Black Bear Diner, inside Max Casino, or online via Zoom. Dr Gedney will take the floor after all the lunch orders have been taken, around 1:30. Those wishing to be on distribution for luncheon Zoom links should contact Rich Dunn at richdunn@aol.com.

Top Stories

... or see all stories

Last summer, Americans issued a collective gasp of horror as images of trash mounds left on Lake Tahoe’s beaches following Fourth of July celebrations flooded traditional and social media.

Greater Nevada Credit Union (GNCU) has announced the recipientsof its first Live Greater Grant program. This year, $289,000 was awarded across 37 community organizations.

Congregations of The Church of Jesus Christ of Latter-day Saints in Carson City are pleased to announce several voluntary representatives (young men and women) who have received mission calls and will soon embark on a journey of faith, service and personal growth.

Classic car shows highlight summers for chrome buffs throughout northern Nevada. A new show has been added to the mix, arriving Saturday, June 29 at the Nevada State Museum in Carson City.

The Carson City Planning Commission will hold its monthly meeting Wednesday, June 26 beginning at 5 p.m. in the Bob Crowell Board Room of the Community Center, located at 851 E. William St.

The agenda includes renewal of a proposed multifamily project permit, a radio tower appeal, among other items.

On Friday, June 28, the Carson City Sheriff’s Office will conduct an alcohol compliance checks. Underage volunteers will be sent into local businesses in Carson City and attempt to purchase alcohol using their real identification.

Cruise down US Highway 395 with local author J. Butler Kyle. Imagine your journey begins with the rugged scenery of Reno on the north end of the eastern Sierra Nevada, over mountain passes such as Deadman Summit, through unique towns along the route like Lone Pine, and down amongst the barren beauty of the Mojave Desert, to its terminus in Adelanto at Interstate-15.

SACRAMENTO, Calif. — A Tahoe City man pled guilty Monday to one count of smuggling amphibians into the United States, U.S. Attorney Phillip A. Talbert announced.

Saturated color spreads across the sky over Carson City Sunday evening.

The impact of wildfires in the Western United States on homeowners and condominium insurance will be highlighted Friday at a town hall meeting hosted by the Nevada Division of Insurance.

A 29-year-old man was arrested Saturday for suspicion of domestic battery, according to a Carson City Sheriff's Office booking report.

Mile High Jazz Band with vocalist Jakki Ford will perform two free big-band concerts in Carson City. The first, on Friday, June 28, is from 6 to 9 p.m. at Mills Park, 1111 E. William Street. It is part of the weekly Family Fun Fridays, featuring live music, food trucks, and family activities every Friday through August 9.

Every year throughout our region, pets are found dead in cars due to heat exhaustion, including those with windows cracked.

With outside temperatures often in the 90s and above, internal car temperatures can reach anywhere from 114 degrees after 10 minutes, to 140 degrees after an hour. Cracking a window often does nothing at all as rolling down the windows has been shown to have little effect on the temperature inside a car, according to the Humane Society of the U.S.

UPDATE: The 'S' on the side of the hill in southeast Carson City that commemorates the Stewart Indian School, and has been there for decades, was vandalized over the weekend. It has since been restored.

Looking for a place to take your little ones this week? Look no further! Here is a list of family-friendly (and fun!) activities and events happening this week around Carson City.

Social media awareness and the dangers that may be imposed on youth will be the focus of a parent and youth education night happening Tuesday, June 25 in Carson City.
Rugby wanted poster

The Carson Tahoe Rugby club is looking for players. The teams started back in 2019 and has grown every year and looking to have you join the team and show off your skills. Currently practice is every Thursday from 5:30 - 7:00. Reach out with any questions or for more information.

UPDATE: The fire was extinguished. NV Energy power in the area has been restored.
***
Carson City Fire Department and sheriff's deputies were called Sunday evening to a possible structure fire and brush fire in the 1200 block of Mountain Park Drive off of Marian Avenue.

Dear honorable neighbor, it’s no longer us or them. We are one big quarreling family trying to get along. Compassion lingers as our common bond, yet we sometimes bow to feelings, and mistake those feelings for thinking.

Grocery Outlet Bargain Market, the extreme-value grocery retailer, today launched its 14th Annual Independence from Hunger Food Drive, to combat food insecurity and support families in vulnerable and disadvantaged communities throughout America. From June 26 to July 31, 2024, Carson City Grocery Outlet is teaming up with the Northern Nevada Dream Center, to collect food and cash donations in-store.

Today I started pruning out the water sprouts in my four crabapple trees. Some people might call these “suckers,” but suckers grow up from the bottom of the trunk and water sprouts grow in the upper parts of the tree. I have been training three of these trees into a somewhat flattened umbrella shape for almost 20 years. The water sprouts just ruin that effect. So, out they come.

Unquestionably one of the most entertaining groups of celebrities at the pro-athlete dominated American Century Championship this year is the star-studded lineup of comedians playing in the July 10-14 edition of the tournament at Edgewood Tahoe.

The plants and trees are on their best behavior at Greenhouse Garden Center in Carson City as they celebrate their 50th anniversary of this awesome garden center, where flowers are in full bloom, trees are standing strong and tall in their pots, vendors are available to give gardening pointers, and there's lots of outdoor decor to make your garden more vibrant and interesting.

Carson City Fire Department, sheriff's deputies and Nevada State Police were called Sunday morning to a vehicle crash at the intersection of US-50, US-395 South Carson Street and I-580.

The annual Pony Express Re-ride, a re-enactment of the original Pony Express Route that spanned nearly 2,000 miles passing through what are now seven western states, returns to the Carson City area on Wednesday, June 26.

The much-anticipated Carson-Tahoe Home & Garden Show is happening this weekend, featuring an impressive array of vendors offering everything from home improvement services and products to health and beauty services and products, ensuring there is something for everyone. Admission is free to the public.

Here is the Carson City area road report for the week of June 24-30, 2024. Closures are expected at the following locations due to road and utility work:

UPDATE 9:44PM: Extinguished at around 8:45 p.m. the small brush fire was under a quarter-of an acre, said Carson City Fire Department Battalion Chief Jon Pedrini. The cause is under investigation.
***
Carson City Fire Department and sheriff's deputies were called Saturday night to a brush fire in the area of Lepire Drive in East Carson City.

Earlier this month, Dirk Roper, owner and CEO of Roper’s Heating and Air Conditioning, made the first of many deliveries of the summer of 50 fans to the Carson City Senior Center as part of the KOLOCares 2024 Fan Drive to help Carson City seniors stay cool this summer.

The USDA Forest Service Lake Tahoe Basin Management Unit is gearing up for our most popular holiday weekend, the Fourth of July. Tahoe is a cherished place, welcoming to all responsible recreationists of diverse backgrounds, and it is essential that Tahoe visitors and residents alike take care of this spectacular place to protect Tahoe’s environment and improve the Tahoe experience for all.