← Back to home
Medical Care

Public Case Spotlight: Adequate Health Care and Overcrowding (Brown v. Plata)

Public Case Spotlight: Adequate Health Care and Overcrowding (Brown v. Plata)

The U.S. Supreme Court affirmed that grossly inadequate prison medical and mental health care can violate the Constitution, and upheld court-ordered remedies.

Public case spotlight. This is a factual, plain-language summary of a publicly documented U.S. Supreme Court decision, provided for general information only. It is not legal advice and does not promise or guarantee any particular outcome. How any decision applies depends on the specific facts, the facility, the jurisdiction, and current law.

In Brown v. Plata (2011), the Supreme Court reviewed long-running litigation over medical and mental health care in California’s prisons, where the system had operated far above its designed capacity for years.

Reported outcome. According to the source, the Court affirmed that the serious, ongoing failures in medical and mental health care violated the Eighth Amendment, and upheld a lower court’s remedial order addressing prison crowding as the primary cause of the problem.

This case is often cited on the connection between prison conditions and constitutionally adequate care.

Source: Brown v. Plata, 563 U.S. 493 (2011), Justia U.S. Supreme Court Center — supreme.justia.com/cases/federal/us/563/493/