Appellee’s Petition for Panel Rehearing is GRANTED in part and DENIED in part. While almost all of the previous opinion remains the same, this court has revised footnote 4 of the previous opinion to address a matter raised in Appellee’s Petition for Panel Rehearing. Thus, the court VACATES and WITHDRAWS the previous opinion dated March 16, 2007, and substitutes the following opinion. In this revised opinion, the former footnote 4 now appears as footnote 5.
REVISED OPINION
This is an interlocutory appeal by Harry Newcomb and Robert Barea, paramedics for the City of Miami, Florida, from the denial of summary judgment based on qualified immunity. Julio Cesar Andujar sued Newcomb and Barea under 42 U.S.C. § 1983, alleging that Newcomb and Barea violated his constitutional rights by acting with deliberate indifference to his serious medical needs. We reverse the denial of summary judgment.
I.
On the morning of May 2, 1999, Andujar and accomplices hijacked a freight truck at gunpoint. 1 As police pursued the truck, Andujar jumped from the truck and fled on foot into a residential neighborhood. Police officers canvassed the neighborhood, and a police dog located Andujar hiding in the yard of a home. The dog bit *1202 Andujar on his right upper thigh and dragged him from the yard to the street. Andujar’s thigh began to bleed, and a police officer called for medical assistance. Newcomb and Barea responded to the request for medical assistance.
Newcomb and Barea determined that Andujar had multiple puncture wounds on his thigh but that his vital signs were good. They cleaned the wounds and wrapped Andujar’s thigh in a sterile bandage. After the bandage was applied, Andujar’s wounds stopped bleeding, but he continued to feel pain. Newcomb and Barea released Andujar to police custody for post-arrest processing.
While being transported to the police station, Andujar was tortured by a police officer who repeatedly plunged a police baton into the bandaged wounds. The wounds began bleeding again. Upon arrival at the station, Andujar was taken to an interrogation room and left alone. Blood from his wounds began puddling on the floor, and he called for help. When police officers returned to the room and saw the blood, they arranged for Andujar to be transported to a hospital. Andujar’s wounds were stitched at the hospital approximately two hours after he was bitten.
Andujar brought suit under 42 U.S.C. § 1983 against Newcomb, Barea, and several police officers. Andujar’s claim against Newcomb and Barea asserts that they acted with deliberate indifference to his serious medical needs when they released him to police custody instead of transporting him to a hospital for further medical treatment. Newcomb and Barea moved for summary judgment based on qualified immunity. The district court denied the motion, and this appeal followed.
II.
“Although the denial of summary judgment generally is not a final appeal-able order subject to immediate appeal, an interlocutory appeal may be taken where the district court denies the defense of qualified immunity and the appeal involves a question of law.”
Gray ex rel. Alexander v. Bostic,
III.
“Qualified immunity protects government officials performing discretionary functions from suits in their individual capacities unless then- conduct violates ‘clearly established statutory or constitutional rights of which a reasonable person would have known.’”
Dalrymple v. Reno,
We first turn to the question “whether [Andujar’s] allegations, if true, establish a constitutional violation.”
Hope,
To prevail on his Fourteenth Amendment
3
claim, Andujar “ ‘must satisfy both an objective and a subjective inquiry. First, [he] must prove an objectively serious medical need. Second, [he] must prove that the [government] official acted with deliberate indifference to that need.’ ”
Bozeman,
Andujar cannot establish, however, that Newcomb and Barea acted with deliberate indifference to his medical needs. To satisfy this subjective part of the Fourteenth Amendment inquiry, An-dujar is required to prove three things: (1) that Newcomb and Barea knew of a risk of
*1204
serious harm; (2) that Newcomb and Bar-ea disregarded that risk; and (3) that the conduct of Newcomb and Barea amounted to more than gross negligence.
Bozeman,
Alternately, even if we were to find Newcomb and Barea’s conduct constitutionally impermissible, we would nonetheless conclude that Newcomb and Barea are shielded from civil liability under the second step of the qualified immunity analysis because “their actions did not violate ‘clearly established statutory or constitutional rights of which a reasonable person would have known.’ ”
Hope,
Andujar has not cited, and we have not found, a case holding that the Constitution requires a paramedic who has treated a detainee’s immediate medical needs to transport the detainee to a medical facility for non-urgent treatment rather than release the detainee to police officers for booking, relying on the police officers to later transport the detainee for further treatment. Thus, there was no factually similar caselaw that would have put New-comb and Barea on notice that their conduct violated the Constitution. Moreover, while there was caselaw establishing the general legal proposition that a government official who intentionally delays providing medical care to an inmate, knowing that the inmate has a serious medical condition that could be exacerbated by delay, acts with deliberate indifference,
see, e.g., Lancaster v. Monroe County, Ala.,
IV.
The district court’s decision denying summary judgment to Newcomb and Bar-ea is reversed and the case is remanded for further proceedings consistent with this opinion.
REVERSED AND REMANDED.
Notes
. In this review of the denial of summary judgment, we set forth the facts in the light most favorable to Andujar, the nonmoving party.
See Hope v. Pelzer,
. When it is undisputed, as it is here, that government officials were acting within their discretionary authority, the burden is on the plaintiff to establish that qualified immunity is not appropriate.
Dalrymple,
. Claims of deliberate indifference to the serious medical needs of pretrial detainees are governed by the Fourteenth Amendment’s Due Process Clause rather than by the Eighth Amendment’s Cruel and Unusual Punishment Clause, which governs similar claims by convicted prisoners.
Lancaster v. Monroe County, Ala.,
.At oral argument, counsel for Newcomb and Barea conceded that Andujar’s injuries were serious.
. Andujar argues that a City of Miami Rescue Policy required Newcomb and Barea to transport him to a treatment facility. “But this observation, even if true, misses the point .... Failure to follow procedures does not, by itself, rise to the level of deliberate indifference because doing so is at most a form of negligence.’’
Taylor v. Adams,
. According to Andujar, his wounds only started bleeding again after a police officer repeatedly poked them with a police baton on the way to the police station.
.Newcomb and Barea’s initial brief states that “a plaintiff who complains that delay in medical treatment rose to a constitutional violation must place verifying medical evidence in the record to establish the detrimental effect of the delay in medical treatment.” Initial Br. of Appellants Newcomb & Barea at 21. Andujar asserts that we should not consider this argument because Newcomb and Barea did not raise it in the district court. We need not decide this matter because in concluding that Andujar failed to establish a constitutional violation, we did not consider the allegedly new argument.
