In this prisoner suit, plaintiff Michael Rene Ross brings Eighth Amendment claims against several defendants alleging that a slippery shower floor was unreasonably dangerous and that he did not receive appropriate medical attention after falling in the shower and injuring his shoulder. Applying a total exhaustion rule, the district court dismissed these claims without prejudice for failure to exhaust administrative remedies as required by the Prison Litigation Reform Act (“PLRA”). We agree that a total exhaustion rule applies, and we AFFIRM.
BACKGROUND
On November 29, 1999, Ross fell in the shower at the McKinley County Detention Center (“MCDC”) and claims to have seriously injured his shoulder. According to Ross, he fell because the shower floor was smooth and concrete and because the shower was not outfitted with slip-resistant mats (mats that had previously been in the shower had been destroyed weeks earlier by other inmates).
On December 1, 1999, Ross filed a Sick Call Request in which he sought a medical appointment due to a shoulder injury he sustained as a result of his fall. On that *1183 same day, Ross submitted an Inmate Grievance Form in which he complained primarily about having been transferred to administrative segregation. In that grievance form, Ross also complained about a “lack of medical treatment for serious injury to shoulder.” His grievance was rejected on the grounds that it presented a non-grievable issue. Nevertheless, Ross did see a doctor for shoulder treatment the next day, December 2, three days after his fall.
On December 6, Ross filed another Sick Call Request seeking pain medication for his shoulder injury. He filed additional Sick Call Requests or Inmate Medical Request Forms seeking further medical treatment, medication, or the like on December 9, December 14, December 23, February 21, 2000, March 2, April 17, May 10, May 28, June 12, and July 5. However, after December 1, 1999, he did not again seek to invoke the prison’s grievance process with respect to any alleged inadequate medical care.
Also on December 6, 1999, Ross filed a Pre-Grievance Resolution Form reporting his November 29 fall, complaining that the shower floor was unsafe because it was smooth and lacked mats, and requesting that this problem be corrected. On December 8, the grievance officer responded that a shower mat had since been placed in the shower where Ross had fallen.
For the majority of the time relevant to this case, Ross was in the custody of MCDC. At the time of Ross’ injury and until early January 2000, MCDC was operated by defendant Correctional Services Corporation (“CSC”), a private entity. In early January 2000, defendant Management & Training Corporation (“MTC”), another private entity, took over operation of the MCDC facility. Between February 4, 2000, and February 25, 2000, however, Ross was temporarily held at the Bernalil-lo County Detention Center (“BCDC”). 2
In October 2000, Ross brought this action pro se alleging two sets of Eighth Amendment cruel and unusual punishment claims. First, Ross claims that defendants County of McKinley, County of Bernalillo, and Correctional Services Corporation were responsible for maintaining an unreasonably unsafe shower facility. Second, he claims that all defendants were deliberately indifferent to his medical needs by failing to give him adequate treatment for his injury. 3
The district court dismissed all of Ross’ claims without prejudice for failure to exhaust administrative remedies as required by the PLRA. The district court concluded that “it appears that Plaintiff exhausted administrative remedies that were available to him on the issue of medical treatment” because he filed a post-injury grievance on December 1, 1999. However, the court found “no indication that Plaintiff initiated or exhausted administrative procedures” with respect to his dangerous conditions of confinement claims. Applying a “total exhaustion” rule, the district court held that because Ross did not exhaust all of the claims he seeks to bring in federal court, the PLRA requires that his entire action be dismissed without prejudice.
*1184 We AFFIRM, but for reasons different than those relied upon by the district court. We conclude that Ross did exhaust his dangerous conditions claims by lodging a Pre-Grievance Resolution Form. Because prison officials resolved Ross’ complaint in his favor and there was apparently no other administrative relief available, Ross was not required to follow up with a formal grievance. However, we conclude that Ross failed to exhaust his medical treatment claims because most of the conduct he now complains of took place after he filed the grievance alleging a lack of medical treatment. Accordingly, that conduct was never brought to the attention of prison officials through the grievance process. Since we agree with the district court that the total exhaustion rule applies to suits subject to the PLRA’s exhaustion requirement, we hold that the district court properly dismissed Ross’ complaint in its entirety without prejudice.
ANALYSIS
I. The PLRA’s Exhaustion Requirement
The PLRA provides that “[n]o action shall be brought with respect to prison conditions under section 1983 of this title, or any other Federal law, by a prisoner confined in any jail, prison, or other correctional facility until such administrative remedies as are available are exhausted.” 42 U.S.C. § 1997e(a). The purpose of this exhaustion requirement is to reduce the quantity and improve the quality of prisoner suits.
Porter v. Nussle,
This requirement applies fully when the plaintiff is a federal or state inmate held in a privately operated facility.
See Jernigan v. Stuchell,
In the instant case, CSC’s grievance procedures first required inmates to “fill out a written Pre-Grievance Request Form providing as much detail as possible.” If prison officials are unable to resolve the prisoner’s complaint, the inmate must then file a Formal Grievance within three days of the occurrence. No appeal process was provided.
We now turn to whether Ross exhausted this administrative process with respect to his various Eighth Amendment claims. “In the absence of particularized averments concerning exhaustion showing the nature of the administrative proceeding and its outcome, the action must be dismissed under § 1997e.... [A] prisoner must provide a comprehensible statement of his claim and also either attach copies of administrative proceedings or describe their disposition with specificity.”
Steele v. Fed. Bureau of Prisons,
II. Ross’ Dangerous Conditions Claims
Ross complains that the MCDC shower was unreasonably dangerous because it was slippery and it did not contain a shower mat. He alleges that he was injured due to this dangerous condition on November 29, 1999. He claims to have exhausted his remedies as to his dangerous conditions claims by filing a PreGrievance Request Form on December 6, 1999. In response, prison officials moved a shower mat into the shower in which Ross had fallen. We agree that Ross sufficiently exhausted his administrative remedies as to these claims. 5
A. Timeliness
We note that the federal Courts of Appeals are divided over whether an untimely grievance is sufficient to exhaust a prisoner’s administrative remedies under the PLRA. The Sixth Circuit has deemed an untimely grievance sufficient, reasoning that “if the state forgoes an opportunity to decide matters internally whether for internal time constraints or any other reason, the PLRA has nonetheless served its purpose, and the prisoner may proceed to federal court.”
Thomas v. Woolum,
This dispute boils down to whether the PLRA’s “exhaustion” requirement contains a “procedural default” rule. In the habeas context, the Supreme Court has recognized that a petitioner who has failed to satisfy state procedural rules meets the “technical requirements for exhaustion” because there are no longer any state remedies available.
Coleman v. Thompson,
The Court explained that the purposes of the exhaustion requirement “would be utterly defeated if the prisoner were able to obtain habeas review simply by ‘letting
*1186
the time run’ so that state remedies were no longer available. Those purposes would be no less frustrated were we to allow federal review to a prisoner who had
'presented
his claim to the state court, but in such a manner that the state court could not, consistent with its own procedural rules, have entertained it.”
Edwards v. Carpenter,
Accordingly, we join the Seventh Circuit in holding that the PLRA, like 28 U.S.C. § 2254, contains a procedural default concept within its exhaustion requirement.
See Pozo,
Yet we conclude that Ross did not procedurally default his dangerous conditions claims in this case. Ross filed his Pre-Grievance Request Form seven days after his fall in the shower, but before the allegedly dangerous condition had been made safer. We need not address in the abstract whether Ross’ complaint was timely because in this case the prison did actually consider it. Nothing in the record suggests that MCDC treated Ross’ complaint as untimely; indeed, Ross received a favorable response and a mat was placed in the shower as he requested. If a prison accepts a belated filing, and considers it on the merits, that step makes the filing proper for purposes of state law and avoids exhaustion, default, and timeliness hurdles in federal court.
See Pozo,
B. Effect of a Favorable Outcome
Having determined that Ross properly invoked the first step of MCDC’s griev- *1187 anee process with respect to his dangerous conditions claims, we turn to whether he was obligated to resort to step two of that process, filing a formal grievance. We hold that he was not required to do so because he was successful in the first stage of the' grievance process, and nothing in the record suggests that there was- any further relief whatsoever available through MCDC procedures.
In
Booth v. Churner,
the Supreme Court held that the PLRA requires a prisoner seeking only money damagés to complete administrative processes that offer some sort of relief, albeit not the damages relief the prisoner wants.
Once a prisoner has won all the relief that is available under the institution’s administrative procedures, his administrative remedies are exhausted. Prisoners are not required to file additional complaints or appeal favorable decisions in such cases. When there is no possibility of any further relief, the prisoner’s duty to exhaust available administrative remedies is complete.
See McGrath v. Johnson,
Pursuant to CSC procedures, Ross began the grievance process by submitting a Pre-Grievance Resolution Form complaining that the MCDC shower was unreasonably dangerous because it lacked a shower mat. The prison responded by furnishing the shower with a mat, thus fully alleviating the problem Ross raised. It appears that CSC was unable to do anything more in response to Ross’ complaint. In particular, nothing in the record indicates that money damages or any other retrospective relief was available through the prison’s grievance process. Having received all the relief the grievance process could offer, Ross was required to do no more in order to exhaust his administrative remedies with respect to his dangerous conditions of confinement claims.
III. Ross’Medical Treatment Claims
As explained above, the district court concluded that Ross exhausted his admin *1188 istrative remedies with respect to his medical treatment claims because he filed a formal grievance on December 1, 1999, alleging a lack of medical care for his injured shoulder. We disagree. 8
As an initial matter, we note that it is not entirely clear exactly what conduct Ross intends to serve as the basis of his Eighth Amendment inadequate medical treatment claims. In his complaint, Ross articulates a laundry list of problems he encountered in seeking to obtain appropriate medical treatment from the time of his injury on November 29, 1999, to July 2000. At a minimum, it seems clear that Ross is seeking relief for more than the fact that his shoulder was not treated between November 29 and December 1, 1999. His Eighth Amendment claims involve numerous incidents that took place after December 1 in which he alleges that prison officials were deliberately indifferent to his medical needs.
None of those post-December 1 incidents were brought to the attention of prison officials through any grievance process. The record is devoid of evidence that Ross made any use of the MCDC grievance procedures to complain of inadequate medical care after December l. 9 Moreover, Ross concedes that he did not invoke the BCDC grievance process while incarcerated there.
A grievance obviously cannot exhaust administrative remedies for claims based on events that have not yet occurred. Nor does a grievance exhaust administrative remedies for all future complaints of the same general type. Ross’ December 1 grievance did nothing to alert prison officials to any inadequate treatment that might take place in the future. Consequently, it did not further the purposes of the PLRA’s exhaustion requirement — allowing prisons to address specific complaints internally to obviate the need for litigation, filtering out frivolous claims, and creating a useful administrative record — as to the inadequate medical treatment claims Ross now pursues in federal court.
We therefore conclude that the administrative remedies available to Ross for his claims alleging inadequate medical treatment from November 30, 1999, to July 2000 were not exhausted, and that these claims are barred by the PLRA.
TV. Total Exhaustion
Finally, we turn to whether Ross’ entire action should be dismissed under the PLRA because he failed to exhaust available administrative remedies as to his medical treatment claims. The only Court of Appeals to have addressed this “total exhaustion” issue in a published opinion, the Eighth Circuit, has concluded that “[w]hen multiple prison condition claims have been joined ... § 1997e(a) requires that all available prison grievance remedies must be exhausted as to all of the claims.”
10
Graves v. Norris,
In the habeas context, the total exhaustion rule is well-established. In
Rose v. Lundy,
the Supreme Court held that 28 U.S.C. § 2254 required district courts to “dismiss a petition for a writ of habeas corpus containing any claims that have not been exhausted .... leaving the prisoner with the choice of returning to state court to exhaust his claims or of amending or resubmitting the habeas petition to present only exhausted claims to the district court.”
The Court began by observing that the text of 28 U.S.C. § 2254 did not address the question of whether Congress intended to create a total exhaustion requirement.
Id.
at 516-17,
The Court next rejected the argument that the total exhaustion rule would act as a trap for unwary pro se litigants.
Id.
at 520,
Finally, the Court rejected the argument that the total exhaustion rule might increase the burden on federal courts. To the contrary, the Court noted that such a rule would actually promote judicial efficiency by discouraging piecemeal litigation at least to some extent. Id. Under a total exhaustion rule “both the courts and the prisoners should benefit, for as a result the district court will be more likely to review all of the prisoner’s claims in a single proceeding, thus providing for a more focused and thorough review.” Id.
In determining whether the PLRA also contains a total exhaustion requirement, we follow a similar analysis. To start, the language in § 1997e(a) itself suggests a requirement of total exhaustion because it prohibits an “action” (as opposed to merely preventing a “claim”) from proceeding until administrative remedies are exhausted.
Further, we believe the policies underlying the PLRA point toward a requirement of total exhaustion. In the PLRA context, a total exhaustion rale would encourage prisoners to make full use of inmate grievance procedures and thus give prison officials the first opportunity to resolve prisoner complaints.
See Porter,
The policies of the PLRA thus strongly support a reading of that statute that requires inmates to exhaust fully all of their claims before filing in federal court. If a prisoner does submit a complaint containing one or more unexhausted claims, the district court ordinarily must dismiss the entire action without prejudice. 13
CONCLUSION
Because Ross failed to exhaust all available administrative remedies as to some of the claims in his complaint, we AFFIRM the district court’s decision dismissing his entire § 1983 action without prejudice. 14
Notes
. Accordingly, Ross’ February 21 Inmate Medical Request Form was submitted to BCDC officials. His other sick call requests were filed with MCDC. Ross concedes that he never invoked any BCDC grievance procedures.
. Ross’ complaint also originally alleged Eighth Amendment claims against the State of New Mexico and two individual doctors, as well as equal protection claims against all defendants. The district court dismissed those claims pursuant to 28 U.S.C. § 1915(e)(2), and they are not before us on appeal.
. Our analysis is limited to exhaustion of remedies issues under the PLRA. We express no opinion as to the merits of Ross’ Eighth Amendment claims.
. It is unclear why Ross seeks to hold the County of Bernalillo responsible for the conditions of the shower at MCDC. Nevertheless, we view this as a merits question, not an exhaustion of remedies issue. There were no remedies available for Ross to exhaust at BCDC with respect to these claims because at the relevant time Ross was an inmate at MCDC. The BCDC grievance procedure "is a right of persons detained at the Facility [BCDC].” Therefore, the relevant administrative remedies with respect to these claims were those offered by CSC at MCDC.
.The text of 28 U.S.C. § 2254 does not expressly refer to a procedural default requirement. It generally requires that the petitioner have "exhausted the remedies available in the courts of the State” and explains that a habeas petitioner "shall not be deemed to have exhausted the remedies available in the courts of the State ... if he has the right under the law of the State to raise, by any available procedure, the question presented.” 28 U.S.C. § 2254(b)(1)(A), (c).
. We find the Sixth Circuit’s reliance on
Oscar Mayer & Co. v. Evans,
First,
Oscar Mayer
dealt with a commencement requirement, not an exhaustion requirement.
See id.
at 761,
. Although some of the defendants did not raise this issue on appeal, we may address it sua sponte as an alternative basis for affirming the dismissal of Ross' action without prejudice.
See Steele,
. Ross appears to argue that no grievance process was available with respect to his medical treatment claims because prison officials responded to his December 1 grievance by noting that he raised a “non-grievable issue.” However, this comment referred to the primary complaint raised in Ross' December 1 grievance, his “housing change from J Pod to Ad. Seg.” Under CSC grievance procedures, disciplinary actions and routine transfers of inmates are not grievable matters. In contrast, the record indicates that some relief for inadequate medical treatment was available through CSC's grievance process.
.We are aware of two Courts of Appeals that have mentioned this issue without resolving it.
See Ortiz
v.
McBride,
. The Antiterrorism and Effective Death Penalty Act of 1996 ("AEDPA") provides that "[a]n application for a writ of habeas corpus may be denied on the merits, notwithstanding the failure of the applicant to exhaust the remedies available in the courts of the State.” 28 U.S.C. § 2254(b)(2);
Moore v. Schoeman,
. At the time, 28 U.S.C. § 2254 provided:
"(b) An application for a writ of habeas corpus in behalf of a person in custody pursuant to the judgment of a State court shall not be granted unless it appears that the applicant has exhausted the remedies available in the courts of the State, or that there is either an absence of available State corrective process or the existence of circumstances rendering such process ineffective to protect the rights of the prisoner.
(c) An applicant shall not be deemed to have exhausted the remedies available in the courts of the State, within the meaning of this section, if he has the right under the law of the State to raise, by any available procedure, the question presented.”
See Rose,
. "In the event that a claim is, on its face, frivolous, malicious, fails to state a claim upon which relief can be granted, or seeks monetary relief from a defendant who is immune from such relief, the court may dismiss the underlying claim without first requiring the exhaustion of administrative remedies.” 42U.S.C. § 1997e(c)(2).
. We also GRANT Ross' motion to proceed on appeal without prepayment of costs and fees and remind him that he is obligated to continue making partial payments until the entire fee has been paid.
