Miсhael McGowan had an upper molar extracted in January 2007 while he was imprisoned at Illinois’s Menard Correctional Center, but the extraction site did not heal and became infected. He was still suffering from complications in November 2007, when a specialist performed the second of two surgeries to close the hole left by the extraction. McGowan then brought this pro se lawsuit under 42 U.S.C. § 1983 and Illinois law, claiming that the dentist who performed the extraction, the prison’s *638 dental director, the regular prison physician, and the prison warden were all negligent and deliberately indifferent to his plight. At screening the district court dismissed the complaint with prejudice for failure to state a claim, see 28 U.S.C. § 1915A(b)(l), reasoning that McGowan’s allegations could not support a finding of deliberate indifference, as opposed to negligence. McGowan moved for reconsideration, but only with respect to Dr. John Gardner, the dentist who extracted his tooth, and Dr. Chapman, the prison’s dental director. The district court denied the motion and allowed the dismissal to stand for all four defendants. McGowan’s appeal concerns only Drs. Gardner and Chapman.
The complaint, supplemented by medical and dental records, provides the information on which we must rely at this stage; we accept its factual allegations as true and draw all reasonable inferences in McGowan’s favor. See
Erickson v. Pardus,
In the month following the procedure, McGowan’s pain increased. He was given aspirin, but the medication provided no relief. On February 28, 2007, he awoke to find that a mass of tissue the size of a golf ball had broken through the stitches; it was so large that he could not close his mouth. He saw his treating dentist, who excised some of the tissue, gave him Tylenol and salt, and recommended to the prison dental director, Chapman, that McGowan see an oral surgeon. But the Tylenol wаs also ineffective in reducing his pain, and the visit to the oral surgeon was not forthcoming. Chapman still had not approved that consultation by March 28 when McGowan’s prison dentist saw him on an emergency basis for more pain and swelling at the extraction site and diagnosed him with a “sinus perforation with fistula tract.” (This is no laughing matter: a sinus perforation is a complication that may occur during the extraction of an upper molar.) See Wikipedia, Dental Extraction, http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/ Dental_extraction (last visited July 15, 2010). A fistula is basically a passageway — in this case, one that connected McGowаn’s mouth to his sinus cavity. See Medline Plus, Fistula, http://www.nlm.nih. gov/medlineplus/ency/article/002365.htm (last visited July 15, 2010). See also Stedman’s Medical Dictionary 736 (28th ed.2006) (noting that a pathologic connection between mouth and maxillary sinus is called an oroantral fistula and is most commonly a complication of removing an uppеr molar). McGowan alleges that he continued to be in pain as the infection spread up his face and that the mass in his mouth and the foul-tasting discharge kept him from eating, causing him to lose weight.
By April 9, 2007, McGowan had received Chapman’s approval to see the contract *639 oral surgeon оn the surgeon’s next regular visit to Menard. That visit was scheduled for the week of April 23, nearly two months after McGowan’s treating dentist had sought approval for intervention by an oral surgeon. But the surgeon cancelled his visit, and McGowan was told he would have to wait another three months until the surgeon came again. Unwilling to postpone treatment for so long, McGowan filed an emergency grievance on April 30. That grievance prompted the treating dentist to request a referral to an oral surgeon at an outside hospital and to prescribe a splint to cover the hole in McGowan’s mouth so that he could eat. But when McGowan received the splint two weeks later, the protrusion — now about the size of a large marble — prevented the splint from fitting properly and without pain, and so he was unable to use it.
Around this time, Chapman approved the outside referral, and McGowan finally saw an orаl surgeon on May 25, 2007. But the surgeon announced that he was not qualified to treat McGowan’s injury and recommended that McGowan see an ear, nose, and throat (“ENT”) specialist. That recommendation did not reach Menard for another two weeks, apparently because the oral surgeon’s оffice had the wrong fax number. This meant that the new request for the ENT specialist was not submitted for approval until June 11. Dental records document that earlier, on June 6, McGowan’s treating dentist had personally advised Chapman of the need to expedite the referral, but Chapman waited until June 20 to give his аpproval. By then, McGowan alleges, nasal mucus was draining out of the extraction site instead of his nose, and the prison doctor had begun treating him for a sinus infection.
Finally, on June 29, 2007, McGowan was evaluated by an ENT specialist, who ordered a CT scan of McGowan’s sinuses before proceeding with trеatment. The CT scan was approved the next day but did not occur until July 16. On August 3 the ENT specialist performed a sinus endoscopy, which is a procedure to remove blockages from the sinuses. See eHealthMD, What Is Endoscopic Sinus Surgery?, http://www.ehealth md.com/library/endosinus/ess_whatis.html (last visited July 15, 2010). Unfortunately, McGowan’s pain continued, the extraction site did not heal, and the hole from his mouth to his sinus allowed food to enter his nose when he ate. The ENT specialist performed another surgery on November 2 to remove the tissue mass and close the hole.
At screening the district court concluded that McGowan’s allegations did not describe deliberate indifference on the part of either Gardner or Chapman; it therefore dismissed the case. The court did not mention the negligence allegations. It is possible that it implicitly declined to exercise its supplemental jurisdiction, see 28 U.S.C. § 1367(c), but the dismissal appаrently addressed the entire complaint and was with prejudice. The court reasoned that McGowan’s allegations about the tooth extraction described only negligence by Gardner and not deliberate indifference. The court then concluded that the May 2007 referral to an outside oral surgеon and the June 2007 referral to an ENT specialist negated the possibility that any of the remaining defendants withheld medical care from McGowan. The court acknowledged that McGowan’s treatment had been dragged out over a long time, but it thought that “a delay in process does not constitute delibеrate indifference.”
McGowan maintains that his complaint states a claim against Gardner and Chapman for deliberate indifference. He stresses that Gardner essentially forced him to have the molar extracted by falsely
*640
stating that fillings are not available to Menard inmates and then performеd a “grossly deficient procedure.” Chapman, he continues, purposely delayed his treatment solely for economic reasons, leaving him now with permanent structural damage to his oral and nasal cavity. Our review of a dismissal under § 1915A for failure to state a claim is
de novo. Santiago v. Walls,
The Eighth Amendment prohibits cruel and unusuаl punishment; that guarantee encompasses a prisoner’s right to medical care. It is well established that “deliberate indifference to serious medical needs of prisoners constitutes the unnecessary and wanton infliction of pain proscribed by the Eighth Amendment.”
Estelle v. Gamble,
We conclude that the district court was too hasty in dismissing the claim against Chapman, especially given its duty to construe McGowan’s
pro se
complaint liberally. See
Erickson,
McGowan’s complaint alleges with specificity a number of troubling delays in his treatment. He was forced to wait three months to see a dentist after he first complained of dental pain. That unexplained delay could support a deliberate-indifference claim if Chapman was aware of the severity of McGowan’s dental problems yet refused to approve a dental visit. See
Hartsfield v. Colburn,
We recognize that a more complete examination of the facts may show that McGowan’s condition did not need immediate treatment, that Chapman was not aware of the need for more urgent care, or that someone else was responsible for the delay. But those are details to be explored during discovery. At this stage, McGowan has stated a claim for such serious delay in his treatment that the Eighth Amendment may havе been violated. His allegations suffice to put Chapman on notice of what he is accused of doing wrong: that is, he allegedly delayed approval for McGowan to see a dentist, an oral surgeon, and an ENT specialist, and these delays both caused McGowan to suffer unnecessary рain and made his condition deteriorate. This is enough. See
Erickson,
McGowan’s case against Gardner is a different matter. His complaint focuses only on Gardner’s decision to extract the tooth rather than to fill it and on the way that Gardner allegedly proceeded. According to McGowan, Gardner lied when he said that “Menard doesn’t do fillings,” and the purpose of the lie was to obtain permission to perform the extraction. But in the end, this dispute is over nothing but the choice of one routine medical procedure versus another, and that is not enough to state an Eighth Amendment claim. See
Berry, supra,
Bеcause we have concluded that it was error to dismiss McGowan’s complaint against Chapman, we vacate the order dismissing the action to that extent and remand for further proceedings consistent with this opinion. McGowan is also entitled to have his supplemental state-law claim against Chаpman for negligence reinstated. We affirm the dismissal of the federal claim against Gardner. Because we understand the district court to have recognized that McGowan’s complaint against Gardner might have stated a state-law claim for negligence, however, we also order that the dismissal of that claim be modified to show that it is without prejudice. See 28 U.S.C. § 1367(c).
Vacated and Remanded.
