In this employment discrimination action, appellant Dolores Griel alleges that she was wrongfully terminated as a nurse in the critical care unit of appellee Franklin Medical Center. She claims that the discharge occurred because of her status as a recovering drug addict and thereby violated the Americans with Disabilities Act, the Rehabilitation Act of 1973, and the Massachusetts anti-discrimination statute. 1 Appellee pointed to evidence showing that the discharge took place after incidents in which Griel had violated protocol requirements during the care of patients. The district court granted summary judgment, finding that no reasonable jury could disbelieve this asserted, nondiscriminatory reason.
Because the evidence is set forth in detail in the district court opinion,
see Griel v. Franklin Med. Ctr.,
On her return to Franklin in late 1996, a co-worker raised concerns about Griefs nursing, and an acting supervisor concluded that Griel’s patients were receiving narcotics too readily and in excessive amounts. Griel was briefly suspended and after a new manager took charge, he agreed with the concerns and brought Griel back to work with restrictions. Thereafter, a report was made that Griel had been rummaging through discarded medication bottles and she was asked to take a drug test. After some delay, Griel took the test and the report was negative.
In March 1997, Griel returned to work without restrictions but in the course of the next two weeks there occurred two more incidents. First, Griel asked a new nurse to administer a drug drawn by Griel — a violation of protocol — and then initially denied doing so before she ultimately admitted it. Thereafter, Griel administered a dose of drugs to another patient without acquiring the required co-signature for surplus narcotics that she wasted or recording one of the doses in the medication records or her nurse’s notes. After a disciplinary hearing, Griel was terminated as presenting an unacceptable risk to patient safety.
At the summary judgment stage, Griel relied primarily upon the presumption and burden-adjusting framework established in
McDonnell Douglas Corp. v. Green,
Our review of the entry of summary judgment is
de novo,
and we take the inferences in the light most favorable to the nonmoving party.
See Thomas v. Eastman Kodak Co.,
If the question in this case was whether Griefs medical choices were defensible, quite possibly the expert evidence she offered would have created a jury issue. But the ultimate issue in a discrimination case is whether the hospital’s
reason
for discharging her was because it
believed
that she was not a safe nurse, primarily because of violations of protocol in the administration of narcotics and, in particular, on Griefs violation of the “you draw, you administer” rule. “The evidence is essentially unrebutted that violating this rule is rare and
very
serious [and] [although plaintiffs experts rebut the seriousness and rarity of the documentation
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and co-sign problems, they are conspicuously silent about Griel’s violation of this rule.”
Griel,
Next, it is quite true that there was some evidence that the hospital was especially concerned when Griel, apparently recovered from her past affliction, began to make substantive medical decisions that managers thought indicated an excessive propensity to prescribe narcotics. But the remarks were triggered by what the managers deemed to be over-prescription; and as the district court pointed out, there is no direct link between the remarks and any disparate treatment of Griel by the hospital.
Griel,
Lastly, the district court took full account of evidence indicating that other nurses were not discharged, or in some cases even disciplined, for individual mistakes. But the district court properly pointed out that no other nurse was identified as committing a series of protocol mistakes in a rather brief period, one of which was an extremely serious violation; and while the hospital did not fire the nurse who actually administered the drugs for Griel in violation of the “you draw, you administer” rule, she was a new and inexperienced nurse who forthrightly acknowledged her mistake, while Griel “equivocated.”
Griel,
We thus agree with the district court that Griel’s evidence did not provide a reasonable jury any basis to doubt that the hospital’s motive in discharging Griel was a genuine concern about her nursing practices. Griel cites our recent decision in
Dominguez-Cruz v. Suttle Caribe, Inc.,
The legal framework for analyzing discrimination claims has been altered since the district court’s decision by
Reeves v. Sanderson Plumbing Products, Inc.,
Affirmed.
Notes
. Americans with Disabilities Act, 42 U.S.C. §§ 12101-12117; the Rehabilitation Act of 1973, 29 U.S.C. § 794; the Massachusetts anti-discrimination act, Mass. Gen. Laws ch. 151B.
