David Wayne Vanderbeck (Beck) is an inmate at the Minnesota Correctional Facility in Stillwater, Minnesota, where he is serving a 360-month sentence for committing second degree murder. Beck appeals the district court’s grant of summary judgment in his 42 U.S.C. § 1983 (Supp. IV 1998) action against defendants. Beck contends that defendants violated his constitutional rights under the Eighth and Fourteenth Amendments by failing to relocate him to a different cell, failing to provide him with a prescribed medical device, and conditioning his having needed surgery on his execution of a release of liabili *332 ty. Because there is a genuine issue of material fact about whether the surgical consent forms were releases of prospective liability, as Beck contends, or merely forms authorizing treatment, we reverse the district court’s order in part and remand for further proceedings.
I.
Beck suffered a gunshot wound on August 23, 1978, that left him with a bullet permanently lodged near his spine that affects his neural functioning. Beck began having pain, cramping, and numbness in his back and lower extremities in 1996. Beck’s physicians determined that walking and climbing stairs were exacerbating his injury and recommended that prison officials relocate Beck to a cell that was closer to the cafeteria and infirmary to minimize further discomfort. Beck demanded that he be placed in cell hall D — the cell hall closest to the cafeteria — or be transferred to another penitentiary that housed a medical unit. The Stillwater nursing supervisor explained to Beck that the prison could not fulfill his specific relocation request because Beck did not meet the prison’s criteria for cell hall D inmates; cell hall D was restricted to inmates with certain job assignments who comported with stringent behavioral standards. Furthermore, he was not diagnosed with an acute or terminal illness necessitating placement in a medical unit. Instead of relocation, prison officials offered to allow Beck to use a wheelchair or to have meals delivered to his cell. Beck refused both accommodations.
Beck also suffers from a right-sided hernia that was diagnosed when he was referred to Dr. Michael Tran in October 1997. Dr. Tran recommended that Beck undergo surgery to repair the hernia, but Beck refused to execute the requisite medical permit forms so the surgery was indefinitely postponed. As a temporary alternative to surgery, Dr. Tran recommended that Beck use a medical device known as a truss. A truss functions similarly to a girdle by holding a muscle wall firmly in place and stabilizing a hernia. Beck refused to be fitted for or to wear a truss.
Dr. Christopher Ceman began caring for Beck in January 1999. Dr. Ceman opined that Beck’s hernia had appreciably worsened and that surgery was the desired course of treatment. Beck, however, still refused to sign the surgical permit forms, and his hernia remained unrepaired.
Beck filed his current action in May 1999 against Dr. Ceman; David Crist, warden at the Stillwater correctional facility; and Erik Skon, the assistant commissioner of the Minnesota Department of Corrections. In recommending that defendants’ motions for summary judgment be granted, the magistrate judge concluded that “[njothing in the record demonstrates that any Defendant was deliberately indifferent to Plaintiff’s medical needs.... [T]he record indicates that Plaintiff has refused to undergo proposed treatment which would be beneficial to his complaints.” (Report & Recommendation at 17.) The district court adopted the magistrate judge’s report and recommendation and granted summary judgment to defendants over Beck’s objections. Beck appeals, asserting that because genuine issues of material fact are present, summary judgment was inappropriate.
II.
The district court’s grant of summary judgment is reviewed de novo.
Jolly v. Knudsen,
“We look to the substantive law to determine whether an element is essential to a case, and ‘[o]nly disputes over facts that might affect the outcome of the suit under the governing law will properly preclude the entry of summary judgment.’ ”
Dulany v. Carnahan,
We have no doubt that Beck suffers from a broad range of physical complaints. He has, however, been seen in the prison infirmary at least sixty times for these complaints, and twenty-six of those visits were with Dr. Ceman during the period from January 11, 1999, to September 30, 1999. Multiple contacts with medical personnel do not necessarily preclude a finding of deliberate indifference, see, for example,
Warren v. Fanning,
The issue of the surgery consent forms is a far more problematic matter. Dr. Ceman stated in an August 23, 1999, progress note that Beck would agree to have his hernia repaired, but “only if he didn’t have to sign an informed consent and only if he could be put under general anaesthesia [sic].” (Appellant’s App. at A243.) In a sworn reply to the defendants’ motions for summary judgment filed in the district court, Beck steadfastly maintained that in order for his hernia to be repaired, the prison conditioned the procedure on Beck’s release of all future liability that might arise from the surgery. Subsequent to this case being submitted to our court, defendants Skon and Crist filed a motion to supplement the record with sworn statements and documents purporting to be substantially similar to those forms presented to Beck.
1
We are troubled by the absence of the consent forms in the summary judgment record. Although mere discomfort and inconvenience do not implicate the Constitution, see
Whitnack v. Douglas County,
III.
For the forgoing reasons the decision of the district court is affirmed in part and reversed in part. Defendants’ motions to supplement the record are denied. The case is remanded for proceedings consistent with this opinion.
Notes
. In August 2000, Dr. Ceman filed a motion to supplement the record with a June 2000 physician progress note. We deny his request.
