Tenley Good v. BioLife Plasma Services, L.P.

CourtCourt of Appeals for the Sixth Circuit
DecidedNovember 5, 2020
Docket20-1236
StatusUnpublished

This text of Tenley Good v. BioLife Plasma Services, L.P. (Tenley Good v. BioLife Plasma Services, L.P.) 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
Tenley Good v. BioLife Plasma Services, L.P., (6th Cir. 2020).

Opinion

NOT RECOMMENDED FOR PUBLICATION File Name: 20a0630n.06

No. 20-1236

UNITED STATES COURTS OF APPEALS FOR THE SIXTH CIRCUIT

TENLEY MCLAUGHLIN GOOD ) FILED Nov 05, 2020 ) Plaintiff-Appellant, ) DEBORAH S. HUNT, Clerk ) v. ) ON APPEAL FROM THE ) UNITED STATES DISTRICT BIOLIFE PLASMA SERVICES, L.P.; SHIRE ) COURT FOR THE EASTERN PHARMACEUTICALS aka SHIRE US, INC., ) DISTRICT OF MICHIGAN ) Defendants-Appellees. ) )

BEFORE: MERRITT, MOORE, and GIBBONS, Circuit Judges.

JULIA SMITH GIBBONS, Circuit Judge. Tenley Good, a twenty-year-old college

student, decided to donate plasma at BioLife Plasma Services. When she arrived at BioLife’s

facility, she checked in with the receptionist, chatted with a phlebotomist, and then went to see a

“medical historian,” who was charged with pricking Good’s finger with a small needle to obtain a

capillary sample. The medical historian pricked Good’s finger with the needle, and Good

remembers thinking “oh no” before the world went black. The medical historian tried to keep

Good’s limp body from falling, but the chair that Good was sitting in swiveled, and she fell head-

first onto the ground. She was rushed from the BioLife facility in an ambulance, and she claims

to have suffered severe injuries because of her fall. This incident was the first time that Good had

been seriously injured donating blood or plasma, but it was not the first time she had passed out No. 20-1236, Good v. BioLife Plasma Services, L.P.

during the process. In fact, she had a long history of becoming light-headed and fainting while

attempting to donate blood.

Good sued BioLife and its parent company, Shire US, Inc., for negligence, claiming that

they breached a duty of care toward her in two ways. First, Good claims that BioLife should have

asked about her prior experiences donating blood before collecting her capillary sample so that

BioLife’s employees would have been aware of the risk that she might faint. Second, Good claims

that the chair that BioLife provided during the capillary sample procedure was unsafe because it

was tall, swiveled, and had no restraints. BioLife moved for summary judgment, and the district

court granted the motion as to both of Good’s theories of liability. For the reasons discussed below,

we reverse the district court’s grant of summary judgment on both theories and remand for further

proceedings consistent with this opinion.

I.

Since she was a child, Good has become light-headed or fainted at the sight of blood.

Despite her aversion to the sight of blood, Good donated blood five times between the ages of

sixteen and twenty because “[s]he felt it was a way she was giving back. . . . [S]he thought it

mattered.” DE 32-5, V. McLaughlin Dep., PageID 2164.

These donations did not always go smoothly. The first time that Good attempted to donate

blood, she fainted when the nurse pricked her finger to take a capillary sample. Then, the next

year, Good made it through the capillary sample process but fainted during the donation.

According to her mother, she also got dizzy during another donation attempt at a local ice rink.

In 2015, one of Good’s classmates persuaded Good to donate blood plasma at BioLife

Plasma Services, L.P. When Good arrived at BioLife to donate, she filled out a form, showed her

ID to the receptionist, and had her fingerprint taken. The receptionist then created a Donor

-2- No. 20-1236, Good v. BioLife Plasma Services, L.P.

Identification Form (DIF) that listed Good’s demographic information and showed that Good

“voluntarily consent[ed] to the withdrawal of [her] blood for the purpose of laboratory testing.”

DE 53-4, DIF Form, PageID 6553.

After a new donor completes the intake process, a phlebotomist conducts a vein check.

The phlebotomist inspects both of the potential donor’s arms to determine whether her veins are

suitable for donation. The phlebotomist also typically asks the potential donor whether she has

donated blood or plasma in the past, and if so, whether she has had any adverse reactions to those

prior donations. If the potential donor indicates that she has had prior adverse reactions, she is

sent to a nurse who may decide that she is not eligible to donate. The phlebotomist then notes the

completed vein check on the DIF but does not specifically note whether the phlebotomist asked

the potential donor about her donation history.

The phlebotomist who conducted Good’s vein check was Julida Griffin Reeves. Reeves

has no independent memory of conducting Good’s vein check, but she testified that she recognized

her writing on the DIF confirming that the vein check took place. She also testified that it was her

habit to always ask donors about their donation history during the vein check.

During her deposition, Good stated that she did not remember anyone conducting a “vein

check” or anyone “sort of looking at [her] arms and [her] wrists and [her] skin to see whether [her]

veins were in good enough shape to donate plasma.” DE 46-7, Good Dep., PageID 4936–37. But

she conceded that a vein check may have happened and that she does not remember because her

“memory at that moment is not great.” Id. at 4937.

While Good cannot dispute that Reeves conducted a vein check, she does dispute Reeves’s

contention that she asked Good about her donation history during that vein check. In an affidavit

filed after depositions were completed, Good stated that “[d]uring the time” she was at BioLife

-3- No. 20-1236, Good v. BioLife Plasma Services, L.P.

“no person inquired of [her] as to any prior adverse reactions to any type of blood draw or donation,

or the sight of blood. DE 77-12, Good Aff., PageID 8335. Similarly, “no questions were posed

to [her] in any format as to prior adverse reactions to any type of blood draw or donation or the

sight of blood.” Id. In her earlier deposition, Good agreed that she had never “talk[ed] to any of

[the BioLife employees] about having passed out previously when donating blood or when seeing

blood,” but her affidavit was the first time that she explicitly stated that no BioLife employees had

asked her about her donation history. DE 46-7, Good Dep., PageID 4939.

After the vein check, Good went to see Sylvia Roberts, the medical historian responsible

for taking her capillary sample. While the medical historian takes a donor’s capillary sample, the

donor is seated at a “high” counter in a “bar chair” with a backrest that has arms on the side and

swivels. DE 46-10, Roberts Dep., PageID 5108–09. The medical historian stands across the

counter. Once the donor is seated, the medical historian cleans the donor’s finger and then pricks

that finger with a small needle to obtain a blood sample. The historians are trained to inform the

donor that a capillary sample will be taken, but they do not give the donor notice immediately

before the finger prick takes place. If there is an adverse reaction, such as someone getting dizzy,

lightheaded, or fainting, the historians are trained to call for a nurse and keep their hands around

the donor to prevent her from falling.

In this case, Good fainted almost immediately after Roberts pricked her finger. Good’s

head went down on the counter, and Roberts attempted to catch her, but Good’s weight shifted,

the chair swiveled, and Good fell. She was taken from BioLife in an ambulance.

Good claims that she suffered significant injuries stemming from this fall. After the fall,

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