Today’s post is a repost of an article I wrote previously about Constipation. Concurrent with this article, I have added a Sample Guideline on Constipation to the Guideline Section of JailMedicine (found here).
I have decided after many years of dealing with complaints of constipation both in the ER and in correctional facilities that bowel health is the last taboo subject. We all received “The Talk” (about sex and reproductive health) when we were adolescents. But nobody seems to talk about how to have a proper bowel movement. It is a subject that inevitably causes giggling and uncomfortable laughter. It is not spoken of in polite society. As a result, many people do not understand how their bowels work. I have found this to be a big problem in the jails I work in. Inmates complain of constipation when they are not really constipated. They are bowel-fixated when there is no reason for them to be. Often, they need education more than they need laxatives. To this end, I want to discuss several essential factors relating to understanding and treating constipation that may help make your correctional medicine practice a little easier.
