Flynn v. Doyle

630 F. Supp. 2d 987, 2009 U.S. Dist. LEXIS 38693, 2009 WL 1110399
CourtDistrict Court, E.D. Wisconsin
DecidedApril 24, 2009
Docket06-C-537
StatusPublished
Cited by21 cases

This text of 630 F. Supp. 2d 987 (Flynn v. Doyle) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering District Court, E.D. Wisconsin primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Flynn v. Doyle, 630 F. Supp. 2d 987, 2009 U.S. Dist. LEXIS 38693, 2009 WL 1110399 (E.D. Wis. 2009).

Opinion

DECISION AND ORDER

RUDOLPH T. RANDA, Chief Judge.

This action, filed May 1, 2006, alleges inter alia that the medical and mental health care provided to prisoners at the Taycheedah Correctional Institution (TCI) in Fond du Lac, Wisconsin, violates the Eighth Amendment to the United States Constitution and Title II of the Americans with Disabilities Act. On March 14, 2007, 2007 WL 805788, this Court certified this case as a class action for injunctive and declaratory relief pursuant to Fed.R.Civ.P. 23(b)(2). The Court defined the class as follows:

(1) the TCI Class, on whose behalf representative plaintiffs bring constitutional claims in this action is defined as: “all prisoners who are now or in the future will be confined at TCI;” and
(2) the ADA Subclass, on whose behalf representative plaintiffs bring statutory claims in this action, is defined as: “all individuals with disabilities who are now or in the future will be confined at TCI.”

(Decision and Order, March 14, 2007, at 29.) The plaintiffs filed a motion for a preliminary injunction, which will be addressed herein.

The plaintiffs seek preliminary injunctive relief “to protect them from the serious, ongoing risks to their health posed by a chaotic medication ordering and administration system.” (Pls.’ Br. in Support of Mot. for Prel. Inj. [Pls.’ Br.] at 60.) The plaintiffs contend that they are likely to succeed on the merits of their claims that TCI’s systems of medication ordering and administration violate the Eighth Amendment. Specifically, they assert that the defendants’ medication ordering and administration systems create an objectively substantial risk of serious harm to TCI prisoners because, 1) TCI’s medication ordering system places prisoners at a substantial risk of serious harm, and 2) medication administration by correctional officers places TCI prisoners at a substantial risk of serious harm. The plaintiffs further assert that the defendants are subjectively aware that the medication ordering system poses substantial risks and that using correctional officers to distribute medications poses substantial risks but have repeatedly failed to take reasonable steps to abate such risks. For the reasons that follow, the Court agrees and finds that injunctive relief is necessary to bring these ongoing constitutional violations to a halt.

I. TCI’s Medication Ordering System

According to the plaintiffs, TCI’s “convoluted and archaic” medication ordering process frequently causes “unconscionable” and “shocking” delays in the delivery of medications to prisoners. (Pis.’ Br. at 4.) Due to its reliance on multiple manual transcriptions of information, the process is “fraught with errors,” which results in patients routinely receiving wrong medications, medications that should have been discontinued, wrong dosages of medications, and medications that cause ad *990 verse interactions with other medications. Id.

After the filing of this lawsuit and an investigation of TCI’s mental health services by the U.S. Department of Justice, the Wisconsin Department of Corrections (DOC) formed a Pharmacy Transformation Workgroup (PTW) to explore deficiencies in the pharmacy system. The PTW summarized the problem as follows:

DOC prescribers hand-write medication orders on paper, which are then faxed to the Central Pharmacy. Refills of orders are handled similarly, with tear off bar codes adhered to a page that is later faxed to the CP. Too much time is wasted in the process of prescribers’ handwriting the medication order, HSU [Health Services Unit] staff photocopying the order and then faxing it to the Central Pharmacy. Current faxed orders are frequently difficult to read. There are problems with illegibility of prescribers’ handwriting, confusion over the inmate/patient’s medication record or incompatibility of complex medications that lead to Pharmacist intervention. This type of intervention slows down the medication order process significantly. ... Medication errors, which carry with them reverberations of liability far into the future, are also a potential.

(Pls.’ Br. at 5.) The PTW concluded that replacing the current process of faxing handwritten medication to the DOC’s Central Pharmacy Services with a computerized prescriber order entry system (CPOE) “should be DOC’s first priority in improving pharmaceutical services.” Id. A CPOE system would “eliminate the current time consuming processes of fax receipt and sortation, and manual entry of order information into [WDOC’s pharmacy management computer] system,” help obviate “further delays while pharmacists or other CP staff contact institution HSUs to clarify what faxed orders actually say,” and “greatly reduce[]” “[m]edication errors” by, among other things, “flagging] for medication contraindications.” (Id. at 5-6.)

The defendants are aware that TCI’s current medication ordering process causes delays and errors and that implementation of a CPOE system should cause the delays and errors resulting from the current system to “plummet.” (See Pls.’ Br. at 24-27.) The plaintiffs conclude that the substantial risk of serious harm facing the women at TCI under the current system is intolerable and that because the defendants have been unable or unwilling to act expeditiously to abate the risk, this Court must order them to do so.

II. TCI’s Medication Administration System

Currently, correctional officers administer medications to prisoners in five out of TCI’s seven housing units. Thus, in those five units officers bear sole responsibility for simultaneously maintaining order, determining which medications to give to which prisoners, and managing a cart full of blister-packed pills and paperwork. Correctional officers “routinely administer wrong doses to the wrong prisoners at the wrong times and improperly memorialize the transaction on a document that will ultimately become part of the prisoner’s permanent medical record.” (Pls.’ Br. at 29.) This “is a dangerous practice that must be stopped immediately.” Id. The danger arises in two primary areas: (1) the actual administration of the medication to the prisoner; and (2) the documentation of the dose on the prisoner’s Medication Administration Record.

First, correctional officers cannot safely administer medications. Rather, the plaintiffs assert that the administration of medication to patients is a nursing function that *991 should be reserved for trained nursing staff, namely licensed practical nurses (LPNs). The DOC’s 2006 self-assessment provides a statement of the problem:

Risk management is an ongoing concern of the Department with the current practice of correctional officers distributing controlled medications throughout the correctional system. Officers do not have the clinical training to recognize the various medications by name, their uses, potential and actual side effects, and whether or not the medications are effective and being properly taken (such medications include psychotropics, narcotics, and other classifications of drugs).

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Cite This Page — Counsel Stack

Bluebook (online)
630 F. Supp. 2d 987, 2009 U.S. Dist. LEXIS 38693, 2009 WL 1110399, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/flynn-v-doyle-wied-2009.