Beyond Do No Harm Network Individual Sign-on

 

The Beyond Do No Harm Network (BDNH) is a group of Turtle Island-based health care providers, public health workers, impacted community members, advocates, and organizers working across racial, gender, reproductive, migrant and disability justice, drug policy, sex worker, and anti-HIV criminalization movements to address the harm caused when health providers and institutions facilitate, participate in and support criminalization. We invite you to join us!

The Beyond Do No Harm Network is a project of Interrupting Criminalization (IC), an initiative led by Andrea J. Ritchie and Mariame Kaba. IC offers political education materials, organizing tools, support skill-building and practice spaces for organizers and movements challenging criminalization and the violence of policing and punishment to build safer communities. 

Since 2018, IC has been working to interrupt criminalization in healthcare and developed the Beyond Do No Harm Principles, an invitation to health care providers, public health workers, and researchers to recommit to caring for people by refusing to participate in criminalization: 

  1. End police and ICE presence in hospitals and in or near health care facilities
  2. End information gathering and documentation that is not directly relevant or related to the person’s course of care
  3. End screening and testing without explicit and informed consent
  4. End the practice of calling police on suspicion of fraudulent identification documents
  5. Stop calling police on people with unmet mental health or medical needs
  6. Stop calling police on people in possession of, distributing, or using drugs
  7. End mandated reporting
  8. Stop supporting prosecution in cases against people who manage their own care or offer community-based care, fail to seek care, refuse care, or fail to disclose their private medical information
  9. Stop participating in or supporting prosecution in cases of transmission of infectious diseases, including HIV
  10. Stop participating in or supporting prosecution in cases related to drug use or overdose
  11. Stop providing and/or sanctioning substandard/violative care for people who are in custody or incarcerated in jails, prisons, detention centers, residential centers, group homes, and state facilities
  12. Stop punishing other health care providers, public health workers, and researchers by calling police on them, reporting them for disciplinary action, or terminating their employment for their refusal to participate in systems of harm
  13. Stop collaborating with the criminal punishment system to violate people in custody, including through performing cavity searches at the request of police or prison officials; evaluating competency to stand trial; experimenting on and sterilizing people who are incarcerated; facilitating torture; or administering the death penalty.

What does it mean to sign on to the principles?
We ask you to sign on to the BDNH Principles as an expression of your commitment to making them a reality in your practice, workplace, and profession-- and to joining with other people in the network to organize towards this end. 

We believe that trust is essential for health care. Criminalization in the context of seeking health care deters patients from seeking out necessary care and assistance out of fear of surveillance or persecution by law enforcement, child welfare, or immigration authorities. Moreover, participating in criminalization is not aligned with accepted medical, midwifery, and other healing philosophies, ethics or standards of care and almost always involves violating the principles of confidentiality and informed consent. Lastly, and perhaps most importantly, criminalization is the antithesis of care-- and has documented adverse health impacts on individuals and communities.

Therefore, we are asking health providers, public health workers, and researchers to be bold -- to refuse to participate in criminalization and recommit to caring for people.

To sign on to the principles, please complete the form below. The information is stored in a secure database, and we are committed to not sharing your information without your consent. 

Where are you living/working geographically (fill in this information if you would like to connect with other health justice organizers in your area to work on local campaigns)?
BDNH Details
Role in Medical Industrial Complex
Healthcare Environment
Where are you in terms of your organizing to interrupt criminalization in access to care?
How do you want to be involved?

 

If you are a part of an abolitionist or public health / healthcare organization that would be willing to endorse the BDNH principles, please fill out this form. 

Vetting questions (these will be deleted once we have reviewed your information)