Curtis v. Lackawanna County

CourtDistrict Court, M.D. Pennsylvania
DecidedOctober 31, 2024
Docket3:23-cv-02092
StatusUnknown

This text of Curtis v. Lackawanna County (Curtis v. Lackawanna County) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering District Court, M.D. Pennsylvania primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Curtis v. Lackawanna County, (M.D. Pa. 2024).

Opinion

IN THE UNITED STATES DISTRICT COURT FOR THE MIDDLE DISTRICT OF PENNSYLVANIA

RYAN CURTIS, : Civil No. 3:23-CV-2092 : Plaintiff, : : v. : : (Magistrate Judge Carlson) LACKAWANNA COUNTY, : et al., : : Defendants. :

MEMORANDUM OPINION On August 16, 2024, the instant case was reassigned to the undersigned, the parties having consented to magistrate judge jurisdiction. (Doc. 61). This prisoner civil rights case was initiated in December 2023 by Ryan Curtis, whose claims relate to his brief period of pretrial incarceration at Lackawanna County Prison from his arrest on February 11, 2022, to February 24, 2022, when he was released on bail. Curtis claims that prison medical officials and corrections officers denied him medical care for a serious infection he developed on his left second toe which resulted in its complete surgical amputation. Specifically, although he acknowledges that the medical defendants provided him the antibiotics he was prescribed, he claims he was never provided prescribed wound care supplies nor was his wound ever cleaned or re-dressed as instructed, despite his multiple requests. Our review of the complaint reveals that Curtis has adequately stated a claim of deliberate indifferent with regard to the medical and institutional defendants but

has not adequately alleged wrongdoing of a constitutional dimension on the part of the corrections officer defendants. Accordingly, for the reasons set forth below, we will grant the motions to dismiss with regard to the corrections officer defendants

and deny the motions with regard to the Lackawanna County, Wellpath, and the medical defendants. I. Factual Background The factual background of this case can be simply stated. The plaintiff, Ryan

Curtis, was arrested on February 11, 2022, on drug-related charges. (Doc. 1, ⁋ 49). At the time of his arrest, Curtis complained to the arresting officers about a painful blister on his toe and was taken to Geisinger Community Medical Center (GCMC).

(Id., ⁋⁋ 50-51). Curtis was experiencing pain, swelling, and redness in the second toe of his left foot with a rash and purulent drainage. (Id., ⁋⁋ 52-53). His toe was cleaned, and the blister was lanced and a wound culture was sent to the lab for analysis. (Id., ⁋⁋ 53-56). His toe was then packed with quarter-inch packing and his

foot was wrapped with gauze and an Ace bandage. (Id., ⁋ 57). Curtis was diagnosed with a left second toe abscess/cellulitis and prescribed the oral antibiotic, clindamycin. (Id., ⁋ 59). His discharge instructions, which were provided to the

arresting officers, stated: [C]over the wound with a clean/dry dressing; change the dressing if it is soaked with blood or puss; take medication as prescribed; follow up with your healthcare provider as advised; gauze packing should be removed in 1-2 days; after packing is removed, continue to clean the area until the skin opening closes; and, check the wound daily for signs of worsening infection.

(Id., ⁋ 62). He was also instructed to follow up at Geisinger Wound Care Center, to call GCMC Podiatry by February 14, 2022, and to contact a healthcare provider if he experienced increased redness or swelling, red streaks in the skin leading away from the wound, increasing local pain or swelling, continued pus draining from the wound two days after treatment, a fever of 100.4 or higher, and/or boil returns. (Id., ⁋ 60, 63). After his release from GCMC, Curtis was transferred to Lackawanna County Prison (LCP) as a pretrial detainee and was committed to the special needs unit (SNU) for a mandatory COVID quarantine period. (Id., ⁋ 64, 66). Curtis alleges that, although Nurse Iannuzzi ordered a prescription for clindamycin, he did not examine or speak to Curtis, gave no orders regarding wound care, and established no follow-

up care plan. (Id., ⁋⁋ 67-68). He also alleges that he was given no wound care supplies for the duration of his incarceration, from February 12, 2022, through the date of his amputation, February 19, 2022. (Id., ⁋ 69). Curtis alleges that he

complained to prison nurses Defendants Mahoney, Smith Oleavia, Peterson, Geisler, Furman, and/or Wayman of increasing pain and redness in his left foot and that the blister on his toe was not improving with the antibiotic when he was given his antibiotic treatment three times daily. (Id., ⁋⁋ 70-72). He states that he showed the

nurses his infected toe and they “displayed disgusted looks and, at times, instructed that they did not want to see it again,” but that they merely instructed him to wash the wound in the sink in his cell and did not provide any wound care supplies or

schedule an examination. (Id., ⁋⁋ 72-75). He also alleges that he repeatedly asked the defendant corrections officers for wound care and cleaning supplies and to send him to medical for treatment but that his requests were denied. (Id., ⁋⁋ 86-89). Moreover, according to Curtis, he submitted a Health Services Request “during the

first few days of his incarceration” requesting that his infection be re-dressed and cleaned. (Id., ⁋ 78). Despite his complaints, he alleges his wound was never properly cleaned, nor the bandages re-dressed during his incarceration at LCP. (Id., ⁋ 79). As

a result, Curtis alleges he was forced to drain his infected wound himself in his cell and wrap it with a sock since he had only the original, soiled bandage from GCMC. (Id., ⁋⁋ 76-77). Curtis was seen by Dr. Ahmed on February 17, 2022, who examined his toe

and “told Mr. Curtis he was fine, handing back the saturated bandage,” and returned him to his cell without cleaning, draining, or otherwise treating his infected wound. (Id., ⁋⁋ 80-82). Curtis submitted another Health Services Request that same day

stating that antibiotics did not seem to be helping, that his toe was still very inflamed and painful and that he had been draining it himself. (Id., ⁋ 83). He received a response from Nurse Wayman two days later, on February 19, 2022, telling him to

continue with his prescribed meds without examining or speaking to him. (Id., ⁋ 84). He was then seen by Nurse Iannuzzi on February 19, 2022, who examined his left second toe and noted moderate to severe swelling and edema, rash, a foul odor,

purulent discharge, decreased sensation, and pain while ambulating, and ordered his immediate transfer to GCMC for evaluation and treatment of cellulitis with a concern for osteomyelitis. (Id., ⁋⁋ 90-92). According to Curtis’s complaint, the wound culture taken at GCMC revealed

that the bacteria infecting his toe was resistant to the prescribed antibiotic, but no medical staff followed up for the results or adjusted his medication. (Id., ⁋⁋ 82, 85). At the GCMC emergency department, imaging showed osteolytic changes in the left

second toe that were concerning for osteomyelitis, and visual examination showed a purulent and actively draining wound. (Id., ⁋⁋ 95-96). The wound was drained, and a surgery plan was made to partially or completely amputate Curtis’s left second toe. (Id., ⁋⁋ 100-101). On February 21, 2022, he underwent a complete surgical

amputation of his toe. (Id., ⁋ 101). Surgical pathology later confirmed acute osteomyelitis. (Id., ⁋ 103). Curtis returned to LCP on February 22, 2022, and was released on bail two days later. (Id., ⁋⁋ 104-05). Curtis filed this complaint on December 18, 2023, naming nearly thirty defendants, including individual medical defendants,1 corrections officer

defendants,2 as well as the contractor providing medical services at LCP, Wellpath, and Lackawanna County. (Doc. 1). He alleges violations under 42 U.S.C. § 1983 of his Fourteenth Amendment rights, as well as State law tort claims sounding in

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Curtis v. Lackawanna County, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/curtis-v-lackawanna-county-pamd-2024.