OPINION
Raymond D. Jackson, a state prisoner on dialysis, brought suit under 42 U.S.C. § 1983 contending that Dr. Duncan McIntosh and Dr. David Victorino had violated his rights under the Eighth Amendment by refusing him a kidney transplant. The doctors moved for summary judgment on the ground of qualified immunity. The district court denied the motion. The doctors appeal.
ANALYSIS
The doctors contend that they are entitled to qualified immunity because there was no clearly established law requiring
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them to provide a kidney transplant to a prisoner on dialysis. The doctors state the issue too narrowly. “The right the official is alleged to have violated must be made specific’ in regard to the kind of action complained of for the constitutional right at issue to have been clearly established.”
Sinaloa Lake Owners Ass’n v. City of Simi Valley,
Certain principles follow necessarily from the deliberate indifference standard and facilitate its application to cases such as this one which involve choices between alternative courses of treatment. We held in
Sanchez v. Vild,
The doctors may well find solace in these principles when they are applied by the trier of fact or on appeal from a final judgment. They are of no avail to the doctors on this interlocutory appeal, however, as Jackson has alleged the doctors chose to deny him the opportunity for a kidney transplant, not because of an honest medical judgment, but on account of personal animosity. If Jackson proves that claim at trial, and he has shown that the delay in performing the kidney transplant was medically unacceptable, he will have shown that the doctors were deliberately indifferent to his serious medical needs.
The doctors further argue that Jackson failed to show a genuine issue of material fact as to whether they were deliberately indifferent, in fact, to his medical needs. As to that question we lack jurisdiction. It is a question that cannot be separated from the merits of Jackson’s ease. It is a question reviewable after trial. We are instructed by the Supreme Court that for these reasons appellate jurisdiction is lacking.
Johnson v. Jones,
— U.S. -, -,
Accordingly, the appeal is DISMISSED for lack of jurisdiction.
