Christine Warren v. Prison Health Services, Inc.

576 F. App'x 545
CourtCourt of Appeals for the Sixth Circuit
DecidedAugust 13, 2014
Docket13-2360
StatusUnpublished
Cited by23 cases

This text of 576 F. App'x 545 (Christine Warren v. Prison Health Services, Inc.) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Court of Appeals for the Sixth Circuit primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Christine Warren v. Prison Health Services, Inc., 576 F. App'x 545 (6th Cir. 2014).

Opinion

BOGGS, Circuit Judge.

Carnell Warren, an inmate at Michigan’s Newberry Correctional Facility, died of a heart attack on January 31, 2010. This case concerns the medical treatment he received from prison officials in the weeks prior to his death. Christine Warren, as administratrix of her husband’s estate, sued various prison officials under 42 U.S.C. § 1983, alleging that they violated Carnell’s Warren’s right, secured by the Eighth Amendment, that prison officials not act with deliberate indifference to his medical needs. The district court granted summary judgment for all the prison officials. Because a jury could reasonably conclude that certain prison officials were deliberately indifferent to Warren’s need for immediate cardiac care, we affirm as to defendants Freytag, Edelman, Kihm, and Pope and reverse as to defendants Shilling and Bomber.

I

A

In January 2010, Carnell Warren was an inmate at Newberry Correctional Facility, a state prison in Michigan’s upper peninsula. 1 On January 16, 2010, Lisa Shilling, a prison nurse, learned that Warren complained that his chest was hurting. According to Shilling’s notes, Warren complained that “his chest hurt very bad.” He stated that “he feels like he is about to have a heart attack, can he please see the doctor.” Shilling called Warren, and Warren denied experiencing chest pain or pressure at that time. Warren informed Shilling that he experienced pain while walking and that he would also become short of breath. 2 Shilling advised Warren to request an evaluation if the pain reoccurred. Shilling noted that Warren perceived his medical need to be “urgent” but that Shilling perceived it to be “routine.” Shilling scheduled Warren for a medical exam two days later, January 18.

On January 17, 2010, Gary Freytag, another prison nurse, learned that Warren again complained that he kept experiencing chest pain while walking. Warren told Freytag that the pain subsided when he sat down and rested. According to Frey-tag’s notes, Warren stated: “I really want *548 to see the Dr not you. I’ll wait for the Dr.” Freytag noted that Warren declined an assessment by Freytag who then scheduled Warren to see a doctor on January 19. Freytag also instructed Warren to contact the health unit if his symptoms worsened or persisted.

On January 18, Dr. Jeffrey Bomber evaluated Warren. Bomber noted that Warren complained of “chest pain.” Warren told Bomber that he had “never had chest pain like this before.” Bomber noted that Warren experienced “mid[-]chest pain that is associated with exertion,” “relieved by rest,” and “associated with sweating and shortness of breath.” Warren denied experiencing pain radiation into his left arm or jaw. Warren’s diagnosis was: “Chest pain, symptoms consistent with true Angina.” Bomber stated in his deposition that this meant that he, in fact, believed that Warren was experiencing chest pain. Bomber requested that Warren receive a “Cardiolite Cardiac Stress Test.” Bomber explained that this test is one “where the patient exercises on a treadmill, or it can be given Persantine, which stresses the heart and you can by laying [sic] down for that.” 3 “Cardiolite” refers to “a nuclear portion [sic] that’s injected, and then a nuclear camera is used to take pictures during the process.” According to Bomber, Cardiolite is a radioactive material that is injected into the vein of the patient. The test that Bomber requested was one that required a cardiologist to perform. Additionally, on January 19, Bomber also placed an order for Warren to receive an electrocardiogram.

In conjunction with Bomber’s evaluation, Bomber submitted a consultation request for Warren to receive the “Cardiolite cardiac stress test by cardiologist or other certified physician.” Bomber indicated that his presumed diagnosis was atheros-clerotic heart disease. Bomber asked the consultant to determine: “Is the patient’s chest pain from ASHD[ 4 ]?” Bomber indicated that Warren had experienced “intermittent chest pain over the past week,” that Warren described the pain as “mid sternal and severe,” and that Warren reported that the pain was “associated with feeling hot and sweaty.” Bomber further indicated that Warren was obese, had diabetes, and was taking Glucophage. Bomber reported that Warren “needs stress testing” and requested that the consultation be performed within one week.

On January 20, 2010, Warren received the electrocardiogram that Bomber had ordered. At his deposition, Bomber stated that he recalled receiving the results and that they were “essentially normal.” 5

Dr. Adam Edelman, another physician, reviewed Dr. Bomber’s request for a Car-diolite cardiac stress test. On January 21, 2010, Edelman responded to Bomber that he “would only do this type of stress test [i.e., a Cardiolite cardiac stress test] under very limited circumstances.” He requested that Bomber submit a new consultation request “for a standard stress test if patient can exercise, or a dobutamine stress echo if he cannot.” Bomber discussed Edelman’s response with Dr. Squire, a third physician. According to Bomber, Squire felt that a treadmill cardiac stress *549 test would provide the same information as a Cardiolate cardiac stress test.

Around this time, Warren telephoned his wife to inform her that he was experiencing chest pains. Warren told Ms. Warren that the prison health unit said it would take him to the hospital. The following day, Warren again telephoned his wife and reported that the health unit still had not taken him to the hospital. He told Ms. Warren that he was continuing to experience chest pain and shortness of breath when walking. Ms. Warren stated in her deposition that her husband said the health unit “kep[t] telling him they’re going to take him to the hospital but they never take him.” One week later, on January 27, 2010, Warren again telephoned his wife. Warren told his wife that the health unit still had not taken him to the hospital and “that he just have to wait till they call him out and then then they’ll take him.”

That same day, Ms. Warren called the prison and spoke with David Kihm, the health unit manager. Ms. Warren told Kihm that her husband was experiencing chest pains and inquired about the status of her husband’s hospital visit. Kihm told Ms. Warren that the prison was “waiting on some tests and documentation ... to be approved for his test.” Kihm told Ms. Warren that he would look into the matter but that protocol needed to be followed. Kihm and Ms. Warren agreed that Kihm would call back in a few hours with an update.

After speaking with Ms. Warren, Kihm contacted Bomber about Warren’s cardiac stress test. Later that day, January 27, Bomber e-mailed Kihm to state that Squire had given verbal approval for a “cardiac stress test (standard).” Bomber instructed Kihm to resubmit the consultation request, to mark it “urgent,” and “to indicate that Squire had pre-approved the request.” Bomber wrote that the test could be “done here at 8 p.m. today or next Tuesday” on February 2.

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576 F. App'x 545, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/christine-warren-v-prison-health-services-inc-ca6-2014.