This case arises on appeal from the district court’s denial of defendants’ motions for partial summary judgment based on the doctrine of qualified immunity.
I. FACTS
In 1984, Timmy Waldrop pleaded guilty but mentally ill to armed robbery charges and was sentenced to a prison term of five to twenty years. On October 15, 1984, Waldrop was sent to the Georgia Diagnostic and Classification Center (“GDCC”) in Jackson, Georgia, for evaluation and treatment of his mental problems. At the time of his arrival at the GDCC, Waldrop had been diagnosed as manic depressive. His mental illness was being controlled with, among other medication, Lithium and Hal-dol, two drugs commonly used to control this type of disorder. Shortly after arrival, Waldrop was taken off all medication including Lithium.
Waldrop’s mental condition deteriorated rapidly. He complained of nightmares, insomnia, and a generally poor mental condition. On November 1, 1984, Waldrop slashed his own forearm, requiring three stitches. On November 4, 1984, Waldrop enucleated or gouged out his left eye. GDCC personnel discovered the injury on November 5, and took Waldrop to the eounty hospital for emergency surgery. Once his physical injuries were treated, Waldrop was transferred to a new facility. On December 6, 1984, while at the Augusta Correctional and Medical Institution in Augusta, Georgia, Waldrop used a prison-issued razor blade to cut his scrotum, losing both testicles. On December 10, 1984, while under restraint in Augusta, Waldrop reached his right eye and damaged it so badly that he lost sight in that eye.
Plaintiffs, Waldrop’s parents acting as his guardians, sued a variety of prison officials under 42 U.S.C.A. § 1983, alleging that the doctors and staff who treated Wal-drop were deliberately indifferent to his psychiatric needs in violation of the Eighth Amendment. Plaintiffs also asserted pendent state tort claims. The defendants were members of the medical and administrative staffs at both the GDCC and at the facility in Augusta. All defendants filed motions for summary judgment on the section 1983 claims based on the doctrine of qualified immunity. The district court granted the motions of all defendants except Drs. Fodor and Smith. Appellant Fo-dor is a psychiatrist under contract with the GDCC to treat patients one day a week and to be on call for emergencies. Fodor treated Waldrop for his psychiatric problems while Waldrop was incarcerated at the GDCC. Appellant Smith is a staff physician at the GDCC who is not a psychiatrist. Smith treated Waldrop for his physical problems while Waldrop was at the GDCC. Fodor and Smith’s appeals are limited to the issue of qualified immunity. 1
II. DISCUSSION
Qualified immunity insulates government officials from personal liability for actions taken pursuant to their discretionary authority. In
Harlow v. Fitzgerald,
Courts evaluate an official’s conduct under an objective, reasonable person standard.
Malley v. Briggs,
Plaintiffs allege that the defendants violated Waldrop’s Eighth Amendment rights. The Supreme Court has held that deliberate indifference by prison personnel to an inmate’s serious medical needs violates the inmate’s right to be free from cruel and unusual punishment.
Estelle v. Gamble,
Grossly incompetent or inadequate care can constitute deliberate indifference,
Rogers,
The district court posed the question in this case as “[w]hether it was clearly established in November of 1984, that providing an inmate with inadequate psychiatric care could lead to a violation of that inmate’s Eighth Amendment rights.”
This Court will consider the entire record, not just the plaintiffs’ allegations, in evaluating this summary judgment motion.
See Rogers,
A. Dr. Fodor
The facts involved in Fodor’s treatment of Waldrop are undisputed. Fodor is a psychiatrist employed by the GDCC. Fodor interviewed Waldrop for the first time on October 18, 1984, in order to evaluate Waldrop’s mental condition. Waldrop had been scheduled to see Fodor because he had a history of psychiatric problems and because he was taking several drugs, including Lithium, to control those problems. The interview lasted thirty to thirty-five minutes. At the conclusion of the interview, Fodor concluded that Waldrop’s psychiatric problems were in remission. Consequently, Fodor stopped Waldrop’s medication and ordered that he be observed for any further manifestations of mental illness. Fodor ordered no other measures to protect Waldrop from the effects of this sudden cessation of Lithium and other psychotropic drug treatments.
Fodor interviewed Waldrop again on October 27, 1984, for between ten and fifteen minutes. This interview occurred nine days after Fodor stopped all drug treatments to control Waldrop’s mental illness. Dr. Smith, a staff physician at GDCC and the other appellant on this appeal, recommended the interview. Waldrop had been suffering from insomnia, nightmares, and nausea. At the conclusion of this interview, Fodor did not place Waldrop back on medication.
On November 1, Waldrop slashed his left forearm. Fodor was not aware of this act of self-mutilation because the attending physician, Dr. Smith, did not inform him of it. On November 4, Waldrop gouged out his left eye. Fodor saw Waldrop on November 8, and at that time Waldrop had just returned to the GDCC from the county hospital. Fodor placed Waldrop on Haldol and Cogentin, two drugs used to control the psychiatric problems that plagued Wal-drop. Fodor did not place Waldrop on Lithium, a drug specifically used to combat depression. Fodor saw Waldrop for the last time on November 15, 1984. At that time Fodor interviewed Waldrop for between fifteen and twenty minutes. Fodor did not order any additional medication or emergency measures, but did request another doctor at the GDCC to complete a psychiatric evaluation within a week. Before this evaluation occurred, Waldrop was transferred to another facility.
*1035 Plaintiffs focus on Fodor’s decisions to take Waldrop off medication and to refuse to give Waldrop Lithium treatments for depression. The controversy boils down to whether Fodor’s decisions to remove Wal-drop from medication and to restore the medication without Lithium constituted deliberate indifference to Waldrop’s psychiatric condition.
Application of qualified immunity is a question of law to be decided by the court.
Mitchell v. Forsyth,
Fodor argues that if a doctor follows established medical procedures and actually treats a prison inmate, he has satisfied his obligation under the Eighth Amendment. Fodor argues that although he may have committed malpractice, he was not deliberately indifferent to the inmate’s medical needs. Simple medical malpractice certainly does not rise to the level of a constitutional violation.
Estelle,
B. Dr. Smith
The facts involving Dr. Smith’s course of treatment are also undisputed. Smith is a staff physician at the GDCC. He is not a psychiatrist. Smith saw Waldrop four times while Waldrop was at the GDCC. The first time was on October 22, 1984, four days after Fodor stopped Waldrop’s drug treatments. Smith saw Waldrop because Waldrop had complained of nausea, nightmares, and insomnia. Smith made a notation in Waldrop’s medical file and recommended that Fodor, who was a trained psychiatrist, examine Waldrop.
Fodor interviewed Waldrop on October 27, but did not place Waldrop back on his medication. On November 1, 1984, Smith treated Waldrop for a self-inflicted laceration of the left forearm. This incident oc *1036 curred approximately two weeks after Dr. Fodor had taken Waldrop off his medication. Smith sutured the wound, but did not notify Dr. Fodor. Smith asserted that he felt the laceration was an attention-getting act and not serious enough to merit special treatment. The district court characterized the laceration as a suicide attempt.
Three days later, Waldrop gouged out his left eye. On November 5, Smith performed emergency surgery on Waldrop’s left eye. Smith then sent Waldrop to the county hospital for further treatment. Upon Waldrop’s return to the GDCC, Smith started Waldrop on Haldol and Cogentin, drugs used to control psychiatric problems. Smith followed the orders and recommendation of Fodor and another psychiatrist at the GDCC in restarting drug treatments without Lithium.
Plaintiffs’ main argument is that Smith should have taken some action in response to Waldrop’s psychiatric problems after Waldrop slashed his forearm. Smith responded to Waldrop’s physical injury by suturing the wound, but took no action regarding his mental condition. As evidenced by the October 22 incident and his notation that Fodor treat Waldrop, Smith knew about Waldrop’s psychiatric needs. Smith also knew or should have known that Fodor’s decision to take Waldrop off medication increased the risk of a psychiatric breakdown. Given that knowledge, petitioners argue Smith should have taken some action in response to Waldrop’s psychiatric needs after Waldrop slashed his own arm.
This case is like Ancata and Carswell in that plaintiffs are challenging the lack of response to a known medical condition. In this case, Smith treated Waldrop for a self-inflicted injury when he knew Waldrop was suffering from severe psychiatric problems. Smith was not a psychiatrist and was therefore unable to evaluate the significance of this act. Nevertheless, Smith failed to notify Fodor or take any other action in response because he felt this was simply an act to attract attention.
The law was clear in 1984 that prison officials have an obligation to take action or to inform competent authorities once the officials have knowledge of a prisoner’s need for medical or psychiatric care.
See, e.g., Estelle,
III. CONCLUSION
The district court’s denial of appellants’ motions for summary judgment based on the doctrine of qualified immunity is AFFIRMED.
Notes
. This Court has jurisdiction to hear these interlocutory appeals under 28 U.S.C.A. § 1291.
See Mitchell v. Forsyth, 477
U.S. 511, 525,
