MEMORANDUM
James Malles sues Lehigh County and PrimeCare Medical, Inc. (“PrimeCare”) 1 pursuant to 42 U.S.C. § 1983 for allegedly violating his Eighth Amendment rights while he was an inmate at Lehigh County Prison. Malles claims that he contracted Methicillin Resistant Staphylococcus Aureus (“MRSA”) while he was incarcerated there and that the defendants unconstitutionally failed (1) to provide him timely, adequate medical care and (2) to protect him from getting infected. He also sues PrimeCare for negligence under state law.
The defendants filed motions for summary judgment, and Malles responded to both motions. For the reasons we discuss at length below, we will grant summary
1. Factual Background
A. Plaintiffs History
Plaintiff James Malles was born on July-30, 1949 and graduated from Overbrook High School in Philadelphia. Malles Dep. at 5-6. After high school he worked at a variety of jobs, including assisting in a photographer’s studio in Philadelphia and working at a car wash and bakery in Florida. Id. at 6-8. He went to the emergency room once in Florida because his arms popped out of joint. 2 Id. at 30. He returned to Pennsylvania to care for his ailing mother, who died in 1988 or 1989. Id. at 8-10.
From 1989 to 1999 Malles served a ten-year sentence at SCI-Graterford for sexual assaults that occurred in Florida and Pennsylvania. Id. at 10-13. During his time in custody, Malles was treated for gastroesophageal reflux, and he has taken Zantac to treat those symptoms. Malles Dep. at 33. After Malles was released, he worked in warehouses through a staffing or employment agency in Allentown. Id. at 14. During that period he suffered two hernias, for which he had surgeries. Id. at 15-17, 36-37. Malles then moved into a hotel, where he also worked part-time. Id. at 19-20. He was taken to the hospital during this time with chest pains, but it turned out to be “gas building up around [his] chest.” Id. at 33-35.
Malles was again arrested in 2005 for sexual assault. Id. at 20, 22. He pled guilty and received a sentence of ten to forty years. Id. at 23, 38. Malles was held at Lehigh County Prison from the day of his arrest, April 30, 2005, through December 1, 2006. Id. at 24, 38. He was transferred to Graterford. and then to Camp Hill. Id. at 24-25. He is currently held at Albion. Id.
B. Inmates’ Medical Care at Lehigh County Prison
At Lehigh County Prison (“Prison”), PrimeCare is responsible for the inmates’ medical care, and Nancy Afflerbach, the Deputy Warden of Treatment, was the liaison between PrimeCare and the Prison. Afflerbach Dep. at 29, 75. To request medical care from PrimeCare, inmates at the Prison would fill out a “sick call slip.” Id. at 73. PrimeCare nurses also visit the inmates three times each day to deliver medications, and, according to PrimeCare, these nurses may — but are not required to — have slips with them. Haskins Dep. at 79; Bahnick Dep. at 20. Usually, when inmates ask these medication nurses for medical advice, the nurses tell them to fill out a slip. Haskins Dep. at 79. Prime-Care believes that correctional officers also have the slips, but PrimeCare will consider any request from an inmate, even if it is not on a slip. Id. at 80 (“An inmate can write a request literally on a piece of toilet paper and place it in a sick call box. And we would have to respond to it.”). See also Bahnick Dep. at 20. But is not sufficient for inmates to simply make an oral request to the medication nurses. Haskins Dep. at 80. According to Malles, inmates were “lucky” to get sick call slips, which were not readily available. 3 Malles Dep. at 73.
MRSA is an infection that is resistant to methicillin, which PrimeCare Health Services Administrator Josephine Bahnick characterized as “one of the stronger antibiotics.” Bahnick Dep. at 22. One can contract MRSA from poor personal hygiene or by sharing gym equipment, toilet facilities, or soap. Id. at 22-23. Some people with skin conditions, such as boils or skin eruptions, are more prone to getting MRSA. Id. at 25.
Afflerbach knew that a female inmate with MRSA had come to the Prison in 2003, and there was a meeting between Prison officials and PrimeCare in February of 2004 to discuss changes that they were considering at the Prison in response to MRSA. Afflerbach Dep. at 50-51, 63-64. Beginning in at least 2004, Warden Meisel was aware that MRSA could spread from one person to another. Meisel Dep. at 19, 31. He believes that MRSA is a “problem” and that suppressing MRSA and other diseases, such as hepatitis C or scabies, is “an issue.” Id. at 30. Meisel reviews information about MRSA outbreaks at the Prison on a quarterly basis. Id. at 28. PrimeCare Vice-President Todd Haskins said that the Prison had “an established protocol for treatment in dealing with” MRSA when PrimeCare took over the healthcare services contract at the Prison in the fall of 2004, but he could not name any specific procedures. Haskins Dep. at 41.
PrimeCare and the Prison did establish a process for addressing MRSA infections. Inmates who possibly have MRSA are tested for the infection and placed in medical isolation while the prison waits for lab results. Bahnick Dep. at 42. After the lab results come in, an infected inmate stays in isolation until any wounds are closed, and he takes an antibiotic to which his particular strain of MRSA will respond. 4 Id. at 42-43. Bahnick receives information about MRSA infections from PrimeCare and makes monthly reports to the Quality Assurance Committee — which is comprised of Bahnick, the Nursing Supervisor, the Warden, and Afflerbach. Id. at 53-54. But when one inmate is infected with MRSA, PrimeCare does not usually notify other inmates. Id. at 55.
The defendants also took some steps to try to prevent MRSA infections. Prison staff began receiving a handout about MRSA in February of 2004.
5
Meisel Dep. at 32. That year, the Prison also eliminated inmates’ use of wash-cloths.
Id.
at 20. Every time PrimeCare inspected the laundry facilities at the Prison, the water temperature was at the appropriate level. Bahnick Dep. at 63-64. There is no evidence to support Malles’s claim that the Prison was cited for health violations.
6
In 2004, the Prison also switched to antimicrobial or antibacterial soaps for inmates’ personal use, and inmates in medical isolation used a Hypacleanse or Dial soap
On June 20, 2005, PrimeCare distributed a “Policy Review Update” to a number of people, including Health Services Administrators and “All Contract Sites.” Memo from Francis J. Komykoski to Junior Vice Presidents, et ah, June 20, 2005, PL’s Ex. I. This document included a policy titled “MRSA Infection Control Measures,” which explained what MRSA is, how people contract it, how to identify it, and other basic information. See MRSA Infection Control Measures, PL’s Ex. I (“Control Measures”). The Control Measures included a list of activities and procedures for “[s]uceessful management” of MRSA, such as discussing prevention with all new inmates, posting a fact sheet for inmates about MRSA, teaching good hygienic practices “including access to showers,” review of a MRSA fact sheet by medical staff, assuring “prompt access to medical care for all skin complaints,” 7 and frequent changing of laundry and “adequate environmental cleaning.” Id. at 5. The policy also directed PrimeCare staff to, among other things, encourage inmates to report skin lesions, “[cjulture if possible all skin infections upon presentation,” evaluate those whose cellmates have MRSA and others who may have close contact with them, and isolate inmates suspected of having MRSA. Id. at 5-6. Inmates with suspected or diagnosed MRSA were to shower daily, and the shower was thereafter to be cleaned with a bleach solution. Id. at 7. Cells of infected inmates were also to be cleaned with the bleach solution. Id. at 7.
As described above, PrimeCare issued the Control Measures during Malles’s time at the Prison, and some — but by no means all — of these recommendations were put into place while Malles was jailed there.
D. MRSA Infection Rates and Statistics
Afflerbach began compiling information about MRSA at the Prison in 2004 and started creating quarterly statistical reports by at least 2005. Afflerbach Dep. at 100-101, 112. She gave these reports to the Director of Corrections, the Warden, and PrimeCare’s Healthcare Administrator. Id. at 111. Those who attended quarterly meetings between representatives of PrimeCare and Lehigh County Prison also discussed these statistics, as well as a wide variety of other topics. Haskins Dep. at 27-28, 99-100.
According to Afflerbaeh’s statistics, fifty men at the Prison tested positive for MRSA in 2005.
8
Statistics at 1. Bahnick characterized this as a “significant” number of cases, but said it did not constitute an epidemic. Bahnick Dep. at 82. Five of the men who were infected in 2005 were from Malles’s housing unit, 1C2. Statistics at 1; Malles Dep. at 55. The number of male inmates who contracted MRSA more than doubled between the second and third quarters of 2005, from eight inmates to
E. Malles’s Housing Assignments and Hygiene at the Prison
When Malles arrived at the Prison in April of 2005, he participated in a medical intake process during which medical staff reviewed his health history. Malles Dep. at 39-40. He did not receive any information about MRSA. 10 Id. at 42. For three or four days he was held in the receiving block, where he was in a cell by himself. Id. at 46^7. During this brief time, he tried to take at least one shower a day. Id. at 48. In fact, at the Prison there was no limit on the number of showers that he could take. Id. at 49. Malles was then assigned to a unit where he stayed for no more than an hour. Id. at 49-51. He was harassed by other inmates and “told” the officer to transfer him elsewhere. Id. at 51. The prison charged him with misconduct for “uprooting the running of a pod”, and put him in disciplinary segregation where he was alone in a cell for seven days. Id. at 54, 58.
After he left segregation, Malles went to the 1C2 unit, where he remained until he later entered medical isolation. Id. at 55, 58-59. In 1C2, Malles occasionally had cellmates, but he does not remember their names. Id. at 59, 62. He never shared soap, toothbrushes, clothing, or towels with his cellmates. Id. at 59-60. The Prison gave inmates an unlimited supply of small bars of soap. Id. at 44-45, 95-96. Malles was told to use a new bar of soap each day, and he did so. Id. at 96. Malles also washed his hands in a sink in his cell before each meal and after going to the bathroom. Id. at 43^4. The prison gave the inmates separate tubs to hold their belongings, but no one told Malles that he should take precautions to prevent infections. Id. at 60, 120. When Malles first noticed an irritation under his arm, discussed below, he began to wash his own shirts in his cell, though he would send the rest of his clothes and towels to the laundry. Id. at 93. Until Malles left the Prison in December of 2006, he washed his own shirts with the soap that the prison gave the inmates to wash their bodies. 11 Id. at 94-95.
The 1C2 unit where Malles was primarily housed had two showers, but one of the showers did not work from the time he arrived on the unit until around October 13, 2005, after Malles returned from medical isolation.
Id.
at 63-64. During this time, up to fourteen prisoners shared one shower on 1C2.
Id.
at 64. The “pod man,” an inmate who was housed on 1C2, was paid to clean the showers and other communal areas of the pod, and to do other work.
Id.
at 65-66. The pod man “always
F. Malles’s MRSA Infection and Treatment
On September 9, 2005, Malles saw an unidentified inmate getting in the shower on 1C2 “who had large suspicious boils on his back.” Id. at 106. Malles saw these sores through an opening in the shower curtain as that inmate took off his sweatshirt. Id. at 107. The man scratched his back against the wall of the shower, and Malles told the pod man about it. Id. at 108. The pod man reported this to the pod officer, and after the unidentified inmate finished his shower, he was called to the infirmary. Id. The unidentified inmate found out that he had MRSA, came back to 1C2 to pack his belongings, and went into medical isolation. Id. at 108-109. The pod man put on a mask and gloves and cleaned the shower. Id. at 110. At some point, the pod man also became infected and spent seven days in isolation. Id. at 109-10. Defendants’ own statistics regarding MRSA show that four people in Malles’s unit, 1C2, had MRSA in the third quarter of 2005, and Bahnick did not know if there were any precautions taken or education given to the other inmates in that unit. Statistics at 7; Bahnick Dep. at 80-81.
Malles first noticed an itch under his right armpit on October 1, 2005. Malles Dep. at 69-70, 71-72. That morning, Malles mentioned it to the nurse who came after breakfast to deliver medications. 12 Id. at 69-70. This nurse was a substitute for the regular nurse. Id. at 76. He purposely took the last place in line and showed his sore to the nurse. Id. at 74. She told him that “it’s probably just from the water” or the detergent. Id. at 71. That evening Malles also mentioned his concern to the regular night medications nurse, who came around 9:30 or 9:45 p.m. Id. at 77. That nurse said that he did not “have any time” for him, and Malles “just left it alone.” Id. at 78. The night nurse also told him to put in a sick call request. Malles asked him for a slip, but the nurse told Malles that he could not get one for him at that time and “just kept on trucking down the road.” Id. at 78.
The next morning, Malles told a different substitute medication nurse that the developing bubbles were getting bigger and he also showed her the redness on his arm. Id. at 79-80. Like the substitute nurse the day before, she told him that the itching was probably caused by the water and that it would likely go away in a couple of days. Id. at 71, 79-80. He did not ask this nurse for a sick call slip “because [he] was getting frustrated at that particular time.” Id. at 80. The same night nurse came each night from October 2 through 5, but Malles did not tell him about the rash because he thought that nurse would give him the same answer as the first night. Id. at 82, 87. He also did not mention his rash to the afternoon medication nurses. Id. at 82.
On the morning of October 3, Malles told yet another substitute nurse that his
On October 6, the regular morning medication nurse returned, and Malles showed her his arm and said that “two of the balls were busted already.” Id. at 87-88. She gave him a sick call slip, which he filled out, and within two hours he was called to the infirmary. Id. at 88, 90. At the infirmary Malles took off his shirt, and the doctor’s assistant looked at his arm. At that point, “she could see it all coming out,” and all of the bubbles under Malles’s arm were “busted.” Id. at 89. The assistant took a sample from one of Malles’s sores, placed it in a tube, put it in a plastic bag, and sent it to the lab. 14 Id. at 98. After that, Malles went back to his cell to pack his belongings before being placed in medical isolation. Id. at 98-99. An officer gave Malles rubber gloves to wear while he packed his belongings, and he also wore a mask. Id. at 99.
Malles was in medical isolation from October 6 to 13, 2005. Id. at 99. After he arrived there, seven other inmates in isolation told him that they had MRSA. 15 Id. at 100-101. On the second day in isolation, a nurse told Malles that he had MRSA, that it was “in [his] ... blood system and the rest of [his] body for the rest of [his] life.” Id. at 124. See also Malles Request to Staff, February 27, 2006 (stamped “received” on March 2, 2006), Lehigh County Ex. C (“I have been informed by PrimeCare Medical that the MRSA will remain in my blood for the rest of my life.”). Reports from BioReference Laboratories confirm that Malles had a “heavy growth of staphylococcus aureus” and that he was “positive for methicillinresistant staph aureus.” BioReference Lab Reports. The doctor called his infection a “staff infection” [sic ], 16 not MRSA, and she advised Malles to wash his hands. Malles Dep. at 124.
During Malles’s seven days in medical isolation, nurses saw him every day, washed the infected area on his arm, and put bandages on it.
Id.
at 104. He was initially given the antibiotic bactrim, and on October 14, 2005, he began taking tetracycline.
17
Bahnick Dep. at 51-52. He saw
G. Malles’s Purported Ongoing MRSA Infection
Malles believes that he will have MRSA “for the rest of [his] life and [he] can break out at any time.”
Id.
at 116. Bahnick said that a few people with MRSA “had reeurrence.” Bahnick Dep. -at 45. Other than Malles’s hearsay testimony regarding what unidentified medical personnel told him, however, there is no evidence in the record that a medical professional has examined Malles and made a determination regarding the status of his infection and whether it may recur.
18
Malles believes, nonetheless, that he had another rash from MRSA while he was incarcerated at Camp Hill.
19
Malles Dep. at 126. A doctor there looked at an irritated area on his back and then told him “you have MRSA, this doesn’t mean that you’re a carrier of it, that you’re the one that gave it out to anybody or anything like that ....”
Id.
at 127. This
II. Analysis 20
To sustain a claim under § 1983, Malles must show “the violation of a right secured by the Constitution and laws of the United States” and “that the alleged deprivation was committed by a person acting under color of state law.”
West v. Atkins,
It has long been established that “deliberate indifference to a prisoner’s serious illness or injury” violates the Eighth Amendment and “states a cause of action under § 1983.”
Estelle v. Gamble,
A. Delay or Denial of Treatment Claim
Malles claims that the defendants violated the Eighth Amendment by delaying treatment of his MRSA-related rash for five days. Denial or delay of medical treatment is serious when it results in “unnecessary and wanton infliction of pain” or “where denial or delay causes an inmate to suffer a life-long handicap or permanent loss.”
Monmouth County Corr. Inst. Inmates v. Lanzaro,
As will be seen,
Keller v. County of Bucks,
One plaintiff in Keller received ineffective treatment for MRSA. At one point— after the prison medical staff had diagnosed him with an infection and given him antibiotics (including one to which he had an allergic reaction) — his condition worsened and his infected sore began to discharge. In response, a nurse only gave him Tylenol. Id. at 204. The next day, this inmate was taken to the hospital where he underwent multiple surgeries. Id.
The other plaintiff in
Keller
attempted to see someone many times about a rash, but had difficulty seeing medical staff. He eventually developed a “scrotal infection” and was taken to the hospital to be treated after he spent thirty-six hours in restricted housing.
Id.
at 204. When the second plaintiff returned to the prison, his scrotal support device was taken away and the prison denied him bandages for his wound.
Id. See also Young v. Kazmerski,
By contrast with
Keller,
our Court of Appeals found no deliberate indifference when prison medical staff monitored and treated a prisoner’s hernia over the course of nearly a year, recommended surgery when his condition worsened, and the inmate eventually fully recovered.
Williams v. Sebek,
In its motion for summary judgment, PrimeCare argues that we should dismiss Malles’s Eighth Amendment claim regarding denial of treatment because there was no material delay in treatment. Malles claims that his “medical treatment was inexcusably delayed for five days.” 22 Malles Brief in Opposition to PrimeCare Mot. at 1. We are dubious that a five-day delay here would violate the Eighth Amendment, especially since there is no evidence that Malles experienced heightened levels of pain or that the delay itself caused any permanent harm. But we need not decide that issue because nurses in fact saw Malles’s rash and sores every day from the first day of itching, October 1, 2005, to the day he was placed in medical isolation, October 6. 23 Every morning the nurses gave Malles advice regarding the cause of his skin irritation and told him that it was not serious and would go away. 24 See Malles Brief in Opposition to PrimeCare Mot. at 8-9.
Malles also complains that he had difficulty accessing sick call slips, but his access to the slips is of no moment in this case because on every day during the five days he in fact saw nurses, showed them his rash, and received an opinion from them regarding his symptoms. 25 Viewing these facts in the light most favorable to Malles, these examinations were (perhaps) perfunctory, and the nurses failed to recognize Malles’s MRSA for five days. But at worst such behavior amounts to negligence, not deliberate indifference.
Malles relies on our Court of Appeals’s decision in Keller, but Malles’s case differs from Keller in crucial ways. Unlike the plaintiffs in Keller, Malles has not experienced serious complications from MRSA or the treatment the prisons gave him. He has not undergone surgeries as a result of the defendants’ behavior, nor does he claim that after his MRSA diagnosis the prison failed properly to treat him (as the nurse did when she gave Tylenol to the infected plaintiff in Keller ). 26
B. Prison Conditions Claim
Malles also claims that the defendants were deliberately indifferent to the risk that he would contract MRSA in the prison by failing to (1) quarantine infected inmates, (2) properly clean and maintain the shower facilities, (3) warn inmates about MRSA and educate them about prevention, and (4) generally take more precautions against the spread of MRSA. Malles complains that PrimeCare and Lehigh County knew that the rate of MRSA infection was increasing, yet they did not change any policies to protect inmates from infection. Defendants contend that we should dismiss these claims because (1) these purported failures do not rise to the level of deliberate indifference and (2) Malles has not produced any evidence of a causal link to establish liability under Monell.
Conditions of confinement constitute cruel and unusual punishment when they “deprive inmates of the minimal civilized measure of life’s necessities” according to “the contemporary standard of decency.”
Rhodes v. Chapman,
There is no dispute that the defendants knew that MRSA was a serious health issue and failed, at least while Malles was at the Prison, to fully execute their own plans to more aggressively prevent the spread of this disease. But Malles does not have a constitutional right to make PrimeCare and Lehigh County achieve their own goals for preventing MRSA, nor does he have a right for the defendants to take all possible measures to prevent MRSA transmission. He only has a right to prison conditions that meet the relatively low bar of the Eighth Amendment. Certainly, defendants may provide inmates with conditions that exceed the constitutional requirements. But they are not required to do that simply because they made a plan to do so.
The proper measure for Malles’s § 1983 claim is whether the conditions of the Prison met Eighth Amendment standards.
Keller
is again instructive. The
Keller
plaintiffs won a jury verdict on their claim that “offensive conditions at the prison created unconstitutional conditions of confinement.” 209 FedAppx. at 206. Those conditions included: “filthy water pooled in the showers, water seeped into the cells, clean laundry was not always readily available, the mattresses were stained, and mil
It bears stress that the facts in the Third Circuit’s
Keller
opinion were “barely” enough to “reveal widespread deprivation of the ‘minimal civilized measures of life’s necessities.’ ”
Keller,
A recent prison MRSA case from the Western District of Pennsylvania, though not binding on us, fortifies our analysis. In
Gallo v. Washington County,
No. 08-cv-0504,
Several weeks later, Gallo had a pain in his leg, but his request for medical care was denied. Medical staff examined Gallo three days later, moved him to the prison clinic, and gave him Motrin—but they did not test him for a recurring or new MRSA infection. Id. at *4. He was in the prison clinic for a week, during which time prison staff observed, but did not examine him, every day. Id. Finally, he was transferred to the emergency room, where he was again diagnosed with MRSA. Gallo “underwent a series of surgeries to remove the infection and to plant antibiotic beads in his femur.” Id. Although the Warden knew about MRSA, the prison had no general infectious disease policies, much less any policies specifically targeted at MRSA. Id. The inmate handbook blamed any infections or rashes on the inmates’ failure to exercise good hygiene. Id. at *5.
Gallo concluded that the plaintiff failed to produce evidence to show that the defendants were deliberately indifferent because there was no evidence that (1) the corrections officer knew that the former inhabitant of Gallo’s cell had MRSA or (2) medical staff knew that a new inmate was being transferred to that cell. Id. at *8. The court also held that prison officials were not deliberately indifferent to the MRSA risk, even though they knew about MRSA and yet neither educated themselves about the infection nor created policies to prevent its spread. Id.
Measured against Gallo’s holding where the defendants did nothing to stop the spread of MRSA, the defendants in Malles’s case cannot be regarded as deliberately indifferent. The Prison and PrimeCare engaged in some efforts to stop the spread of the infection, even if they did not do everything they could or planned to do.
Defendants also argue that there is no evidence that their actions (or inactions) were a proximate cause of Malles’s injuries. There is indeed no evidence that more rigorous cleaning or any other measures would—or could—have prevented or reduced the likelihood of infection. Because the conditions at the Prison, as compared to those in
Keller,
do not rise to the level of a constitutional violation, and because Malles has presented no evidence of causation, we will dismiss Malles’s § 1983 claim with regard to the conditions of the prison and defendants’ alleged failure to protect him from becoming infected with MRSA.
See Tollman v. Barnegat Bd. of Educ.,
III. Conclusion
Malles has not produced evidence to support his claims that the delay in treatment—such as it was—or conditions of confinement rise to the level of cruel and unusual punishment and therefore constitute Eighth Amendment violations. At worst, Malles alleges that defendants were negligent in their diagnosis and treatment of his MRSA infection, which will not suffice to support a claim under § 1983. Malles has also failed to produce evidence to support his contention that defendants were deliberately indifferent to a substantial risk of serious harm regarding his infection with MRSA.
We will therefore grant defendants’ motions for summary judgment as to Malles’s § 1983 claims. The only re
AND NOW, this 27th day of July, 2009, upon consideration of the motion for summary judgment that PrimeCare Medical, Inc., filed (docket entry # 711), plaintiffs response thereto (docket entry # 82), Lehigh County’s motion for summary judgment (docket entry # 75). Le-high County’s amended motion for summary judgment (docket entry # 79), plaintiffs response thereto (docket entry # 81), Lehigh County’s crossclaim against I PrimeCare, which is now moot because plaintiff has not prevailed II on any of his claims against Lehigh County, and plaintiffs request to dismiss Lehigh County Department of Corrections because it is not a separate entity from Le-high County, and in accordance with the accompanying Memorandum, it is hereby ORDERED that:
1. All claims against Lehigh County Department of Corrections are DISMISSED;
2. Lehigh County’s crossclaim against PrimeCare, Inc., is DISMISSED AS MOOT;
3. PrimeCare’s motion for summary judgment (docket entry # 71) is GRANTED IN PART;
4. Lehigh County’s first motion for summary judgment (docket entry # 75) is DENIED AS MOOT;
5. Lehigh County’s amended motion for summary judgment (docket entry # 79) is GRANTED;
6. Count I of the Amended Complaint is DISMISSED;
7. Count II of the Amended Complaint is DISMISSED WITHOUT PREJUDICE; and
8. The Clerk of Court shall CLOSE this case statistically.
JUDGMENT
AND NOW, this 27th day of July, 2009, in accordance with the accompanying Memorandum and Order granting defendants’ motions for summary judgment, JUDGMENT IS ENTERED on Count I in favor of defendants Lehigh County and PrimeCare Medical, Inc., and against plaintiff James Malles, with each side to bear its own costs.
Notes
. On July 8, 2008, we approved the parties' stipulation to dismiss defendant Josie Bah-nick, and on January 6, 2009 we approved the parties’ stipulation to dismiss defendants Dale Meisel, Warden of Lehigh County Prison, and Nancy Afflerbach, the Deputy Warden of Treatment. Plaintiff has also agreed to dismiss his claims against the Lehigh County Department of Corrections because it is not a separate judicial entity from defendant Lehigh County.
. One physician involved in treating this injury suggested that he put a "nut and bolt” in Malles. Malles Dep. at 31. Malles told him that "if God wanted me to be a robot, he would have made me to be a robot.” Id. Under the advice of another doctor, Malles was able to recover from this injury through exercise. Id.
. We discuss Malles’s difficulties in accessing the sick call slips below. Warden Meisel said that he did not receive any complaints about the lack of sick call slips, Meisel Dep. at 56,
.The lab report identifies antibiotics to which an inmate's particular strain of MRSA is sensitive. Bahnick Dep. at 44. See BioReference Laboratories Reports for James Malles, October 10 and 14, 2005, Lehigh County Ex. B ("BioReference Lab Reports”).
. Meisel said that inmates began receiving information about MRSA in 2006 or 2007, but he was not sure if the inmates got this information in 2005. Meisel Dep. at 23, 32. Indeed, Malles says he did not receive any information about MRSA in 2005. Malles Dep. at 41-42.
. The only evidence Malles offered to support this point is that he saw a "guy who came around [the Prison] showing a badge.” Malles Dep. at 117.
. According to PrimeCare, “prompt access” to medical care for skin complaints is within twenty-four hours. Haskins Dep. at 77.
. One of these men was from Chester County and another was from a different facility, MCCC, so in 2005 there were 48 males who were inmates at the Prison who were infected with MRSA. See Statistics at 1. The record does not disclose the total average inmate population in 2005.
. In explaining his review of the infection rates, Haskins could not articulate what he would consider to be a "spike” in the infection rate, but he did say that a "doubling of incidents” would "get [their] attention.” Haskins Dep. at 100.
. Malles was brought back to Lehigh County for a post-conviction hearing in 2007. At that time, he received information about MRSA that advised him to "wash [his] hands and stuff like that.” Malles Dep. at 41-42. But he did not receive this information when he was at Lehigh County Prison the first time in 2005. Id.
.Malles characterized the soap as "[l]ittle, small, smell-good soap that they were giving out.” Malles Dep. at 95.
. At that time, Malles took Zantac and vitamins. Malles Dep. at 74. He also currently takes Gas-X and Tylenol for arthritis. Id. at 129.
. Malles did not ask anyone other than these nurses for a sick call slip. Malles Dep. at 92.
. Reports on Malles's infection confirm that medical staff collected the sample on October 6, 2005 and the lab received the sample that same day. The lab made its first report on October 10, 2005 and then apparently made additional reports to the prison on October 11 and 14, 2005. See BioReference Lab Reports.
. At the time of his deposition Malles did not know the names of these inmates. Malles Dep. at 102-103.
. It bears repeating that MRSA stands for "Methicillin Resistant Staphy lococcus Aureus.”
. According to the report from BioReference Laboratories, Malles's infection was sensitive to tetracycline. See BioReference Lab Report.
. As an exhibit to its motion for summary judgment, Lehigh County submitted documents from Luther V. Rhodes, M.D., Chief of the Infectious Diseases Division and Chairman of Infection Control at Lehigh Valley Hospital. Allentown Infectious Diseases Services, Inc., Documents, Lehigh County Ex. D. Dr. Rhodes reviewed the complaint, Malles's prison medical records, the depositions of James Malles, medical personnel, and prison staff, and various discovery documents and responses to interrogatories. He made a "firm conclusion that the Lehigh County officials were not responsible for Mr. Malles acquiring MRSA skin infection.” Id. at 1. Importantly, it appears that Dr. Rhodes has not personally examined Malles.
Dr. Rhodes noted that Malles had daily access to showers and that "[djaily showering or bathing are perfectly appropriate skin hygienic measures to help prevent MRSA.” Id. According to Dr. Rhodes, sanitizing shower stalls between each use is not required to control MRSA, "would not appear to be practical[,j and is certainly not the usual practice of hospitals in this country.” Id. at 2. Dr. Rhodes concludes that Lehigh County performed the “key elements of a MRSA control program,” which include implementing daily showers or bathing, and "proper diagnosis and treatment of MRSA skin infections.” Id. He characterizes Malles's claims that he was infected from the shower water or that broken showers led to his infection as a "specious argument [that is] not at all substantiated by the medical facts.” Id.
Dr. Rhodes contends that MRSA is "treatable and curable” and that Malles is “sadly uninformed” to think that it is a permanent infection. Id.
PrimeCare submitted an expert report from Arnold L. Lentnek, M.D., who also reviewed some of Malles's medical records and documents from this case, but did not examine Malles. See Letter from Arnold L. Lentnek to Thomas E. Brenner (Apr. 8, 2008), PrimeCare Ex. F. Dr. Lentnek appears to have made a number of errors regarding the dates on which events occurred. He repeatedly reports, in contradiction to Malles's deposition and his medical records, that events occurred in September of 2005 rather than October of 2005.
Nonetheless, Dr. Lentnek accurately noted that there was a five-day period between the appearance of Malles’s symptoms and the initiation of treatment for MRSA. Id. at 2. He reported that "in the absence of evidence of severe systemic infection (‘sepsis') such a delay i[s] not inappropriate and, in fact, many minor skin infections ... will resolve spontaneously over this period.” Id. In a follow-up letter to plaintiff’s counsel, Dr. Lentnek also stated that there is no evidence in Malles's deposition or his medical records that he had a systemic infection. Letter from Arnold L. Lentnek to Jennifer L. Mundy (Sept. 25, 2008), PrimeCare Ex. F at 1.
Plaintiff submitted no expert report.
. Malles said his only MRSA outbreaks were at Lehigh County and Camp Hill. Malles Dep. at 130.
. Summary judgment is appropriate if there is no genuine issue of material fact and the moving party is entitled to judgment as a matter of law. Fed.R.Civ.P. 56(c). In ruling on a motion for summary judgment, the Court must view the evidence, and make all reasonable inferences from the evidence, in the light most favorable to the nonmoving party.
Anderson v. Liberty Lobby, Inc.,
The moving party bears the initial burden of proving that there is no genuine issue of material fact in dispute.
Matsushita Elec. Indus. Co. Ltd. v. Zenith Radio Corp.,
. To be sure, Keller was at a different procedural posture than Malles's case. Keller involved the Fourteenth Amendment rights of pretrial detainees, rather than the Eighth Amendment rights of prisoners like Malles. We find the case instructive, however, as pretrial detainees' Fourteenth Amendment rights are “analogous” to prisoners’ Eighth Amendment rights. Keller, 209 Fed.Appx. at 203 (internal quotations omitted).
. Malles malees no claims regarding the adequacy of his medical treatment once he was taken to the infirmary, so we will not discuss his care after October 6, 2005.
. Although Malles argues that he was denied access to medical care, he acknowledges that some of the nurses "did not ignore his complaints” and gave him advice about the cause and nature of the skin irritation. Malles Brief in Opposition to PrimeCare Mot. at 8-9.
. Malles contends that these nurses were "untrained and/or unsupervised,” but there is no evidence of record regarding the nurses’ identity, much less regarding their training and supervision. Malles Brief in Opposition to Lehigh County Mot. at 3.
. To be sure, the nurses he saw each day were there to dispense medications to inmates and not to treat patients. Malles argues that this evidences a policy or practice to prevent the medication dispensing nurses from communicating with inmates regarding their medical conditions. But the facts of this case deviate from the policies: the medication nurses in fact looked at Malles's arm area daily and gave him their opinions about his malady.
. Judge Fullam in
Keller
concluded that the defendants "did nothing to provide medical
. When Judge Fullam in
Keller
discussed the plaintiffs' conditions of confinement claims, he stated that there was a sufficient basis for the jury to conclude that the defendants "through deliberate indifference allowed conditions in the facility that were likely to cause disease, injury or suffering.”
Keller,
. Puzzlingly, plaintiff cites
Yudenko v. Guarini,
No. 06-4161,
. We thank Morgan, Lewis & Bockius, LLP, especially Eric Kraeutler, Richard J. DeFortuna, Jamie Kohen, and Seth Ptasiewicz, Esqs., for their pro bono representation of the plaintiff in this fact-intensive matter.
