Standard Practice Personified: Herein, Cory "crazycorycorner.weebly.com" Nelson, the man hired in 2011 to oversee The Arizona State Hospital, and this after having been ostracized in his home state of South Dakota for improprieties specific to a similar position in that state, is granted even more authority than his Arizona state contract allowed for at the time of his original hiring. Great job, Will Humble, great job, indeed.
Please feel free to see, as available online: HSC Pay Raise Sparks Questions Administrator Receives $10,000 Pay Increase By Nathan Johnson, Yankton Press Wednesday, July 7, 2010. Therein you will find details flowing from the investigation of Cory Nelson's unlawful conduct in his prior position, pre-Arizona.
ALSO: OF THE CORRECTIONS INDUSTRY AND RELATED DISCONNECT BETWEEN ASH'S HIGHEST RANKING STAFF AND THE PATIENTS THEY ARE SUPPOSED TO SERVE, AND THE ROLE IN THE SAME CONTEXT OF FOREIGN TRAINED PSYCHIATRISTS- SUCH AS (NATIVE PAKISTANI) DR. PERVAIZ AHKTER- WHO EXHIBIT HIGHLY QUESTIONABLE BEHAVIOR IN TERMS OF MEETING THEIR OBLIGATIONS IN THIS CONTEXT, IN BLATANT DEFIANCE OF THE HIPPOCRATIC OATH AND SHOCKING INSULT TO THE CHARACTER OF OUR NATIONS' HISTORY.
Cory Nelson lands ADHS behaviorial health post
ALSO: OF THE CORRECTIONS INDUSTRY AND RELATED DISCONNECT BETWEEN ASH'S HIGHEST RANKING STAFF AND THE PATIENTS THEY ARE SUPPOSED TO SERVE, AND THE ROLE IN THE SAME CONTEXT OF FOREIGN TRAINED PSYCHIATRISTS- SUCH AS (NATIVE PAKISTANI) DR. PERVAIZ AHKTER- WHO EXHIBIT HIGHLY QUESTIONABLE BEHAVIOR IN TERMS OF MEETING THEIR OBLIGATIONS IN THIS CONTEXT, IN BLATANT DEFIANCE OF THE HIPPOCRATIC OATH AND SHOCKING INSULT TO THE CHARACTER OF OUR NATIONS' HISTORY.
Cory Nelson lands ADHS behaviorial health post
Cory Nelson, who has been acting as interim deputy director for behavioral health at the Arizona Department of Health Services since August, now is permanently in that position.
Will Humble, director of ADHS, who appointed Nelson to the post permanently, said he has shown great skill and leadership in that position.
“He’s been very successful working with our leadership and our agency team as well as our behavioral health stakeholders and colleagues at AHCCCS and ADES,” Humble said. “His administrative and leadership skills are perfect for where we’re headed in the state’s behavioral health system.”
Nelson will continue to provide oversight of the Arizona State Hospital, where he has served as CEO while temporarily overseeing the behavioral health agency. But now, ADHS will begin a national search for a new CEO for the state mental hospital. That CEO will report directly to Nelson.
(END OF NEWS ARTICLE)
(END OF NEWS ARTICLE)
Only in Arizona- business as per the norm.
Of the corrections industry and related disconnect between ASH's highest ranking staff and the ASH patients they are supposed to serve.
Prior to his employment in Arizona, circa the first decade of this century, Cory"crazycorycorner.weebly.com" Nelson spent close to 15 years as a middle level administrator of South Dakota's corrections system. As such, he acquired reasonable experience in attending to the operations of prisons, and while there may be some merit to how that form of experience might serve a person involved in any formal institution management, I contend that there is a more critical fact specific to the extraordinary difference between the status of individuals serving time in relation to criminal conduct in contrast to the dynamics of persons undergoing long term hospitalization. Indeed, this fundamental precept is only one more detail of how my flow of treatment at ASH was distorted by individuals who treated me as though I am immoral, depraved, or otherwise deserving to be treated like a criminal. I am not a felon in any sense whatsoever (I was once arrested for misdemeanor DUI in 1999, met all of my related requirements, and served no time in jail at all, and that's the full extent of my legal record, period), and yet, one of my primary care providers at ASH, a particularly twisted psychiatrist named Pervaiz Ahkter, felt the need to ask me this question the first time we met:
"Are you really not a felon?"
This man, Ahkter, in fact, is a "doctor" of sorts who acquired his formal medical education in his home nation of Pakistan, of all places, where fundamental human rights and the principles of democracy are virtually nonexistent. (Of note in this context: I just viewed the film "Zero Dark Thirty", and man oh man does Ahkter's behavioral characteristics make just that much more sense today. Check it out, and ask yourself what sort of doctors from that area of the world were turning out 20-30 years ago, at the onset of America's current conflicts specific to Pakistan, Afghanistan, and so on. But I digress...). While today it is clear to me that Ahkter's aim was to insult or otherwise degrade me (in utter defiance of his role as a licensed doctor), at the time I found his inquiry very disturbing because it suggested that this particular "doctor" was either unable/unwilling to read my formal medical record, or worse yet, that he was incapable of offering reasonable medical treatment to anyone not convicted of a serious crime(s). This specific incident is only one example of how patients at ASH are treated by senior clinical staff upon whom we- the patients- most centrally depend in terms of the possible healing process and wellness in general. Indeed, I can attest to the fact that these sorts of individuals literally piss on any such healing and wellness, and they know it. Substandard medical-mental health care, and they are getting away with it.
Prior to relocating to Arizona in 2012, Cory Nelson, cut his farm bred teeth right out of college as an administrator of a prison system in one of the very poorest states in America today, South Dakota. Towards the tail end of that 15 year period, Nelson was appointed to overseeing one aspect of South Dakota's behavioral health care network, again as a middle level administrator who in no way functioned in direct contact with the population he was responsible for serving. (A clarification may be in order: All mentally ill members of public hospitals such as ASH, etc., are also citizens of the state in which persons such as Nelson are obligated to serve). It was also during this brief period of time (2009-10) that Nelson engaged in an unlawful-unauthorized process by which he received a marked salary increase that defied the will of South Dakota's citizenry, which led to at least one formal investigation by Yankton, SD's primary newspaper (see: HSC Pay Raise Sparks Questions; Administrator Receives $10,000 Pay Increase by Nathan Johnson, Yankton Press, Under this cloud of suspicion Cory Nelson began seeking work outside of South Dakota, including submitting an application for the position of supervisor at Arizona's sole long term public mental health care facility, The Arizona State Hospital. He did so as a man with no formal experience working directly with mentally ill persons, who engaged in clearly unjust fiscal activities specific to the state of South Dakota's public resource base. Bottom line. And yet, as per the "wisdom" of Will Humble (NOT!), Nelson not only appeared in a pool of candidates for supervision at ASH, he was was subsequently granted that position (effective August 01, 2011), where he immediately downsized the hell out of ASH's security staff with little to no input from ASH staff in general, while simultaneously ignoring good faith communications about highly questionable clinical practices from persons like myself (who was at the time hospitalized at ASH), as well as his own staff as soon as they began experiencing graphically violent patient attacks that arose as a direct result of Nelson's actions in this context. (see online: Phoenix' ABC affiliate news station CH 15, or AZ Family CH 12 for direct video of Nelson's statements in this matter, wherein he blatantly lied about the underlying facts specific to staff concerns at that time). It was at this point they learned that in Nelson's view, it is up to them- the nurses, technicians, and so on- to defend themselves with little to no direct support from staff specifically employed to provide security. These specific matters arose within the first 12 months of Nelson's hiring, and only scratch the surface of Nelson's willingness to ignore the substandard medical, mental health care practices at ASH. And yet now, in utter contradiction to Cory Nelson's lack of scruples and related ineptitude, the man has been granted even more responsibility than ever, which now extends well beyond the walls and fences of The Arizona State Hospital itself, and directly into the lives of each and every mentally ill and disabled citizen in the state of Arizona. Substandard medical-mental health care and practice that occurs due to state level administrative corruption and related ineptitude- and they are getting away with it.
FROM THE ABOVE ARTICLE, WILL HUMBLE ON CORY NELSON'S HISTORY AND SO CALLED SKILL BASE:
His administrative and leadership skills are
perfect for where we're headed in the
state's behavioral health system.
Who will next take over the authority as ASH's supervisor? An individual interviewed and hired by Cory Nelson?
Indeed, this pictures as it stands is far from pretty, but definitely serves as yet one more clear illustration of the crisis in Arizona's public health care system, as per the "leadership" (NOT!) of Will Humble, with complicity flowing from the Office of the Arizona Attorney General, and a range of other like authoritative resources. All at the expense of Arizona's taxpayers, and to the grave detriment of Arizona's most seriously mentally ill and disabled population, a population known as being highly vulnerable to neglect, exploitation, and outright abuse. Back room negotiations of the sort that led South Dakota's citizens to question Cory Nelson's lack of ethics there in his home state are now arising in the context of his advancement(s) in our home state, ARIZONA. Standard practice personified, at the expense of Arizona's taxpayers and to the full detriment of our state's most seriously mentally ill and disabled citizens.
All that I and my patient peers at ASH have ever asked is for persons such as Cory Nelson and Will Humble to meet their most fundamental obligations as individuals granted the privilege and associated responsibilities specific to our rights and needs as seriously mentally ill and disabled citizens. But they refuse to do the right thing in this context. Bottom line. They are all in violation of law, policy, and codes of common decency, and it is time to bring this issue to an end, once and for all.
paoloreed@gmail.com
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I would really love input of any kind from anybody with any interest whatsoever in the issues that I am sharing in this blog. I mean it, anybody, for I will be the first one to admit that I may be inaccurately depicting certain aspects of the conditions
at ASH, and anonymous comments are fine. In any case, I am more than willing to value anybody's feelings about my writing, and I assure you that I will not intentionally exploit or otherwise abuse your right to express yourself as you deem fit. This topic is far, far too important for anything less. Thank you, whoever you are. Peace and Frogs.