POULSON v. SMITH

CourtDistrict Court, W.D. Pennsylvania
DecidedDecember 8, 2023
Docket1:22-cv-00260
StatusUnknown

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

Bluebook
POULSON v. SMITH, (W.D. Pa. 2023).

Opinion

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

ERIE DIVISION

) ) 1:22-CV-00260-RAL CHARLES POULSON, )

) Plaintiff ) RICHARD A. LANZILLO

) Chief United States Magistrate Judge vs. )

) OPINION ON DEFENDANTS’ MOTION KIM SMITH, et al., ) TO DISMISS

) Defendants ) ECF NO. 44 )

I. Introduction Plaintiff Charles Poulson, an inmate confined at the State Correctional Institution at Forest (SCI-Forest), initiated this pro se civil rights action seeking monetary relief pursuant to 42 U.S.C. § 1983. In his amended complaint – the currently operative pleading – Poulson asserts that medical professionals at SCI-Forest violated his constitutional rights as secured by the Eighth and Fourteenth Amendments to the United States Constitution by failing to provide him with adequate medical care. ECF No. 29. As Defendants, Poulson has named three individuals employed at SCI-Forest: Nurse Leslie, a nurse practitioner; Nurse Ferdarko, a nurse supervisor; and Kim Smith, the Health Care Administrator for the prison. Id. at p. 1. Presently pending is a motion to dismiss filed by Defendants Ferdarko and Smith.1 ECF No. 44. Plaintiff having filed a response, see ECF No. 47, this matter is ripe for adjudication.2

1 Leslie is represented by separate counsel and has not moved to dismiss. See ECF No. 49.

2 The parties have consented to the jurisdiction of the undersigned United States Magistrate Judge to conduct all proceedings in this case, including the entry of final judgment, as authorized by 28 U.S.C. § 636. II. Factual Background The following factual averments are accepted as true for purposes of this motion.3 On

August 31, 2020, Poulson visited Leslie at sick call for pain in his lower back and neck. ECF No. 29 at 2; ECF No. 11-1. Following an examination, Leslie applied a heating pad to Poulson’s lower back to treat his pain. ECF No. 11-1. Leslie applied the heating pad twice more the following day. Id. Later that afternoon, Poulson was changing his clothing in his cell when his cellmate noticed that his t-shirt was sticking to his back. Id. Poulson removed his t-shirt and observed that his back was severely burned and that his t-shirt was full of dried blood. Id. Poulson maintains that the heating pad was “extremely hot” but that he could not feel it burning his skin because of a medication that he was taking at the time that dulled his response to pain. Id. He notes that his back remains “raw” and believes he has been permanently scarred. Id. He

accuses Leslie of using a faulty heating pad and overlooking that Poulson was taking a medication that prevented him from feeling his burns. ECF No. 29 at 8. Poulson filed an administrative grievance against Leslie following the incident. See ECF No. 11-1. Ferdarko, to whom it was initially assigned, observed that “[Poulson’s] back appears to be burned and there is a possibility it was from a heading pad,” but found “nothing indicating that medical staff were negligent.” ECF No. 11-2. Ferdarko explained that there were no prior injuries to alert the staff that the machine was not working properly (despite it being regularly used) and that medical personnel promptly and appropriately removed it from service and provided immediate treatment for Poulson’s burn. Id. Accordingly, Ferdarko “upheld

3 Poulson’s pleading, in addition to relying heavily on legal conclusions, is not a model of clarity. Most critically, it does not contain a timeline or description of the incident that caused him harm. Consequently, the Court is relying, in part, on the statement of facts set forth in Poulson’s administrative grievance (attached as an exhibit to his complaint at ECF No. 11-1) for background and context. [Poulson’s grievance] in that [his] back appears to be burned and there is a possibility it was from a heading pad,” but denied compensation because “there is nothing indicating that medical staff were negligent.” Id. Poulson appealed to the facility manager who, for reasons that are unclear, remanded

Poulson’s grievance for additional review and response. ECF No. 11-7. On remand, the grievance was assigned to Smith. ECF No. 11-8. After reviewing Poulson’s medical records, Smith noted that he had suffered a “14 cm by 5 cm burn to the left side of the back and a 11 cm by 6 cm burn to the right side of his back.” Id. She further noted that medical staff promptly cleansed his burns, applied non-stick dressing, treated his burns with Silvadene cream, and monitored him daily for signs of infection. Id. During several follow up visits, medical providers observed that Poulson’s burn wounds were “healing well” and that “there was new tissue growth around each wound edge.” Id. Poulson continued to receive regular treatment for his burns for the next several months. Id. Based on the foregoing, Smith upheld Poulson’s grievance but declined to award compensation:

Inmate Poulson’s grievance is upheld – the heat pack treatment did cause Inmate Poulson to get burns on his back. … [However], Inmate Poulson’s grievance is denied in that medical was not negligent. Had any staff known that the machine was malfunctioning the unit would have been pulled from rotation prior to any injury. Upon this investigator being notified I did pull the unit from rotation and all other hot pack treatments to other inmates were discontinued. The safety manager was notified and the appropriate accident investigation was done. Inmate Poulson was immediately referred to the practitioner when nursing staff found out about his injury and he has received appropriate care.

Id. at 11-9. Poulson’s claims against Ferdarko and Smith appear to be based primarily on the aforementioned grievance responses and their supervisory roles in the prison hierarchy. In his pleading, he explains that Ferdarko “is a supervisor to Defendant Leslie, who caused the injury to [his] back,” and that Ferdarko “failed in his duty to insure Poulson would not get injured by the heat pads that were treating his back.” Id. at 6. He avers that Ferdarko had a general responsibility “to make sure the heating pad machine was working proper and not

malfunctioning” and that Ferdarko “should have known that [Poulson] was taking medication that prevented [him] from feeling the heating pads that were treating his back.” Id. Notably absent are any facts from which the Court might infer that Ferdarko played any role in the decision to use the heating pad (or, for that matter, even knew that Poulson had sought treatment for lower back pain on the relevant dates). Turning to Smith, Poulson similarly alleges that she “was in a supervising position for Defendant Leslie and Defendant Ferdarko” and “failed in her duty to properly train Defendant Ferdarko and Defendant Leslie in regards to maintaining adequate medical equipment (heating pad machine).” Id. at 3. He suggests that Smith “has demonstrated a pattern of not providing adequate medical care to patients such as [Poulson], and she demonstrated that she does not

check or maintain adequate care for the medical equipment such as the heating pad machine that scarred [Poulson’s] back for life.” Id. Poulson further states that Smith “knew or should have known that she should have informed her staff (Defendant Leslie, and Defendant Ferdarko) that Plaintiff Poulson was taking medication that would prevent him from feeling the heating pads heat on his back.” Id. at 5. As with Ferdarko, Poulson has not pled any facts suggesting that Smith played a direct, active role in the medical treatment that caused his injury.4

4 Nor could she have. It is well-established that a Corrections Health Care Administrator is not a medical provider.

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POULSON v. SMITH, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/poulson-v-smith-pawd-2023.