Melissa Flones v. Beaumont Health System

567 F. App'x 399
CourtCourt of Appeals for the Sixth Circuit
DecidedJune 4, 2014
Docket13-1955
StatusUnpublished
Cited by12 cases

This text of 567 F. App'x 399 (Melissa Flones v. Beaumont Health System) 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
Melissa Flones v. Beaumont Health System, 567 F. App'x 399 (6th Cir. 2014).

Opinion

JULIA SMITH GIBBONS, Circuit Judge.

This appeal concerns Beaumont Health System’s discharge of Melissa Flones on April 6, 2010. Flones had worked as a nurse anesthetist at Beaumont for more than twenty-six years when, from November 2009 through March 2010, she received three progressively serious plans for performance improvement. Flones was placed into increasingly severe performance plans after she (1) used her personal cell phone while caring for a patient, (2) set up and began to administer the wrong drug to a patient through an epidural catheter, and (3) ordered and administered a blood transfusion without a doctor’s order, all in violation of Beaumont policy. Between her receipt of the second and third performance plans, Flones complained to Beaumont’s human resources department about age discrimination and a hostile work environment. The third performance plan resulted in her termination. Flones sued in federal district court, alleging claims of age discrimination and retaliation. Beaumont moved for summary judgment, which the district court granted. We affirm.

I.

Beaumont employed Flones as a Certified Registered Nurse Anesthetist (CRNA). Flones worked as a CRNA for more than twenty-six years, beginning in 1983 at Bon Secours Hospital, which was subsequently acquired by Beaumont. As a CRNA, Flones worked under the supervision of an anesthesiologist, who is a medical doctor. At Beaumont, an anesthesiologist is typically responsible for up to four operating rooms, each staffed by a CRNA working under his or her direction. Flones was assigned an operating room, and, for each procedure in that room, she was responsible for checking the anesthesia machine, interviewing the patient, inducing anesthesia, and monitoring, waking, and transporting the patient to the recovery room. Flones performed her responsibilities to the satisfaction of Beaumont until 2009.

On November 30, 2009, Flones received a level-one plan for performance improvement, which found that on August 31, 2009, a patient complained that Flones used her personal cell phone while remaining with the patient in an endoscopy suite. The *401 findings outlined in the level-one performance plan were authored by Mary Golinski, Flones’s supervisor and the chief CRNA, and the plan was signed by Flones, Golin-ski, Judith DeMario, administrative director of surgical services, and Brian Car-deccia, a human resources representative.

On February 1, 2010, Flones received a level-two plan for performance improvement, based on a finding that on January 5, 2010, after the anesthesiologist inserted an epidural catheter into a labor-and-delivery patient, Flones accidentally set up and began the infusion of an antibiotic instead of the correct anesthetic. According to the plan, the attending anesthesiologist asked Flones what anesthetic admixture was being administered, and Flones responded that she did not know. Although the infusion program had begun, the attending anesthesiologist and Flones checked the medicine and identified the error before the patient received the incorrect drug. Flones was placed into a level-two performance plan and served a one-day suspension. The findings outlined in the level-two performance plan were authored by Golinski, and the plan was signed by Flones, Golinski, DeMario, and Cardeccia. In compliance with the Michigan public health code, which requires the reporting of staff changes, Beaumont reported Flones’s suspension to Michigan’s Bureau of Health Professions.

Later that month, in February 2010, Flones scheduled a meeting with DeMario and Cardeccia to complain about age discrimination and a hostile work environment. In this meeting, Flones advised DeMario and Cardeccia of several remarks that she interpreted to be ageist, sexist, or hostile. First, Flones advised that Sue Winay, the lead CRNA, told Flones on April 29, 2009, that she was “[s]ick of all you hormonal women, it’s time that we got rid of half of you fuckers,” and on May 1, 2009, that “[i]f I [Winay] had a nine millimeter, I’d take somebody out.” Flones told the human resources representative, Car-deccia, that Golinski was aware that Winay made these comments. Second, Flones stated that in 2008, Golinski asked her if she were too old to work sixteen-hour shifts. Flones replied that she had not worked a sixteen-hour shift in nine months, to which Golinski responded, “Melissa, you’re not listening to me.” A few days later, Flones asked Golinski to clarify her remark, to which Golinski again replied that Flones was not listening to her. Third, Flones advised that a coworker, Eric Reim, said that he heard anesthesiologists mention that Golinski intended to fire Flones along "with another coworker, Ed Gaspar. Lastly, Flones advised that another co-worker, Earl Auty, had made a comment about “hard bodies” working at Beaumont’s Troy Hospital.

After the meeting, human resources investigated Flones’s complaints. Cardeccia directed DeMario to speak with Golinski and Winay to confirm the statements Flones alleged each had made. DeMario informed Golinski that Flones complained to Cardeccia. Golinski, however, averred in her deposition that DeMario only mentioned Flones’s complaint that Reim said Golinski intended to fire Flones. Golinski stated that she did not remember DeMario mentioning Flones’s complaint that Golin-ski herself had made allegedly ageist comments. Golinski also represented that although she heard second-hand that Winay made the threatening comments, she did not directly hear Winay “saying those words.” When DeMario confronted Wi-nay, Winay had no recollection of making the alleged ageist and hostile statements. But Cardeccia noted that Winay had a habit of making threatening comments. Cardeccia also suggested that Flones speak with Reim. According to Flones, Reim confirmed that he had heard that *402 Golinski intended to fire Flones. But according to Golinski, Flones said Reim denied that he had overheard that Golinski intended to fire Flones.

On May 18, 2010, Flones received a level-three plan for performance improvement, which resulted in her termination. The plan found that on March 29, 2010, while Flones monitored a patient undergoing a total hip replacement performed by Dr. Paul Schreck, she unilaterally made the decision to administer “blood products (packed red cells) without consultation or collaboration or order from the surgeon or from the medically directing anesthesiologist of record.” According to Beaumont surgical-services operating-room policy, “[b]lood transfusions will be administered in the operating room upon the order of a physician.” According to Beaumont’s nursing education policy, “[b]lood products are administered only upon the explicit order of a licensed physician.” The level-three plan noted that Flones “expressed that she was unaware of the requirement to collaborate with the medically directing anesthesiologist and/or surgeon prior to administering blood products.” Flones testified that when she administered blood to the patient she had no order to do so from either of the physicians in the operating room. The plan contained a finding that “the surgeon and anesthesiologist did not believe that blood was indicated and would not have ordered the packed cells for transfusion” and “expressed great concern regarding [the] risk posed to the patient because [Flones] acted outside her scope of practice.” Indeed, the attending surgeon, Schreck, spoke with Flones after the incident and confirmed that Flones had made the decision independently.

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