Thomas v. Chmell

CourtDistrict Court, N.D. Illinois
DecidedSeptember 4, 2024
Docket1:20-cv-04564
StatusUnknown

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

Bluebook
Thomas v. Chmell, (N.D. Ill. 2024).

Opinion

IN THE UNITED STATES DISTRICT COURT FOR THE NORTHERN DISTRICT OF ILLINOIS EASTERN DIVISION

Donzell Thomas ) ) Plaintiff, ) ) ) v. ) No. 20 C 4564 ) Samuel Chmell, et al. ) ) Defendants. )

MEMORANDUM OPINION AND ORDER Donzell Thomas has been serving a life sentence at the Illinois Department of Corrections since 2006. He suffers from a number of physical ailments, including osteoarthritis and degenerative joint disease, which have caused him significant pain over the years of his incarceration. Mr. Thomas is currently housed at Stateville Correctional Center, where he claims that healthcare providers have been deliberately indifferent to his serious medical conditions and have provided constitutionally inadequate medical care, including in retaliation for grievances he filed about that care. This is one of several lawsuits Mr. Thomas has brought to vindicate his Eighth Amendment right to be free from prison conditions that cause “the wanton and unnecessary infliction of pain,” Rhodes v. Chapman, 452 U.S. 337 (1981), and his First Amendment right to file non-frivolous grievances, see Perez v. Fenoglio, 792 F.3d 768, 783 (7th Cir. 2015).1 In November of 2021, I dismissed some of the claims and defendants in this case, see ECF 57, but I determined that Mr.

Thomas was entitled to discovery to try and prove his claim against Wexford Health Sources, Inc., under Monell v. Dep’t of Soc. Servs. of City of New York, 436 U.S. 658 (1978), and his claims against Dr. Marlene Henze, a physician employed by Wexford and the medical director at Stateville, under the Eighth and First Amendments. Both of these defendants have now moved for summary judgment. I grant their motions for the following reasons. I. One of Mr. Thomas’s earlier cases, Thomas v. Gomez, No. 17- cv-5936 (N.D. Ill.), provides relevant background to the claims he asserts here. In Gomez, which was likewise resolved at summary

judgment, Mr. Thomas claimed that since at least March of 2015, he suffered from pain, swelling, and warmth in his left leg, and “popping” in his left knee, as a result of osteoarthritis and degenerative joint disease. See Thomas v. Gomez, 659 F. Supp. 3d 944, 948-49 (N.D. Ill. 2023). Numerous times between March of 2015

1 Thomas v. Pfister, No. 18-cv-4311 (N.D. Ill.), and Thomas v. Gomez, No. 17-cv-5936 (N.D. Ill.), both of which were before me, similarly challenged the conduct of certain individuals and entities involved in Mr. Thomas’s medical care during his custody. and December of 2017, Mr. Thomas consulted medical providers who are not named in the present action to address these and other issues. During that time, he was prescribed ice, Tylenol, the use of a crutch, and a cortisone injection for his leg and knee. Id.

at 949. When this treatment did not alleviate his symptoms, Mr. Thomas received an X-ray, an MRI, and physical therapy. Id. at 949-950. In addition, he was prescribed “twelve different medications,” knee sleeves, and topical creams, and when these did not resolve his symptoms, he was referred to an orthopedic surgeon. Id. at 950, 951. In 2016, Mr. Thomas was referred for knee surgery. Wexford’s L.R. 56.1 Stmt., ECF 114 at ¶ 7. Dr. Samuel Chmell, an orthopedic surgeon at the University of Illinois at Chicago Hospital (“UIC”), explained to Mr. Thomas that he would feel discomfort after the procedure, and that in up to 20% of cases, patients continue to experience pain for medically inexplicable reasons. Id. at ¶ 8. Mr. Thomas underwent total knee arthroplasty at UIC on September 24, 2019. Id. at ¶ 7,

In the present case, Mr. Thomas complains about defendants’ treatment of his pain and other symptoms he has experienced since his knee replacement surgery. Beginning the day after his surgery, Mr. Thomas reported to Dr. Henze that he felt severe pain in his left leg, which was hot and dark red, and he faults her for failing to examine him on that day or to prescribe antibiotics. Mr. Thomas continued to experience these symptoms, and he returned to UIC for follow-up on October 7, 2019, where he received x-rays. According to Dr. Chmell, the x-rays revealed hairline fractures that likely occurred during his knee surgery and would heal on their own in

six to eight weeks. Mr. Thomas again returned to UIC for follow- up on November 18, 2019. His records from that day reflect that he presented with an increased range of motion in his knee and no evidence of infection; a well-aligned prosthesis with no evidence of hardware failure; and no fractures to his tibia or fibula. But because Mr. Thomas reported ongoing pain, Dr. Chmell recommended an MRI. Dr. Henze saw Mr. Thomas four days later, and she referred him for an MRI pursuant to Dr. Chmell’s recommendation. Dr. Henze also reviewed Mr. Thomas’s clinical findings and increased his doses of Tramadol and ibuprofen. Wexford approved the MRI referral request on December 5, 2019. The procedure was scheduled for December 30, 2019, but was canceled

due to Mr. Thomas’s complaints of pain. Mr. Thomas ultimately underwent the MRI on January 29, 2020. It revealed “multifocal longitudinally oriented intramedullary infarcts within the proximal and distal tibial diaphysis,” which Dr. Chmell considered “odd findings.” Accordingly, he ordered additional tests and recommended that Mr. Thomas see another specialist for a second opinion. Back at Stateville, Dr. Henze reviewed the MRI results with Mr. Thomas on February 3, 2020. She expressed alarm at the finding of bone infarcts. Mr. Thomas recalls Dr. Henze saying that “infarcts” could cause death, blood clots, and heart attacks, and that she was not familiar with infarcts occurring in the bones.

She thus made an urgent referral back to UIC to address this condition. Wexford’s L.R. 56.1 Stmt., ECF 114 at ¶ 21. Dr. Henze’s urgent referral was approved, and Mr. Thomas was seen again at UIC on February 24, 2020. At that time, he was in no acute distress and had no erythema, warmth, drainage, or signs of infection. X-rays again showed a well-aligned prosthesis, no evidence of hardware failure, and no evidence of fracture. Wexford’s L.R. 56.1 Stmt., ECF 114 at ¶ 22. Because of his unusual MRI findings, Dr. Chmell referred Mr. Thomas to a bone tumor specialist to rule out the possibility of cancer, although Dr. Chmell did not think a cancer diagnosis was likely. Indeed, Dr. Chmell did not believe, based on the MRI, that Mr. Thomas was in medical danger or at risk of substantial harm. Id. at ¶ 21; see also Sladek Rep., ECF 133-7 at 28 (during his care and treatment

for knee and hand/wrist pain, “Mr. Thomas was never at risk for substantial harm and was not in any medical danger.”) Dr. Henze saw Mr. Thomas again on March 4 and 5, 2020. She ordered an additional MRI to the tibia/fibula and further follow up at UIC orthopedics. Dr. Henze also prescribed Tramadol and Neurontin for his pain and wrote permits for low bunk, low galley, shower daily, waist chains, ice twice per day, and slow walk. Mr. Thomas was scheduled for an appointment with UIC’s bone tumor specialist on April 20, 2020, but by that time, Covid-19 restrictions were in place, and UIC staff determined that Mr.

Thomas did not meet the hospital’s criteria for an in-person visit. Dr. Henze and other Stateville employees followed up to request clarification as to why Mr. Thomas could not be seen in person. Dr. Chmell explained that the risk that Mr. Thomas could contract Covid-19 and transmit it to “a vulnerable population” warranted heightened precautions. There is no dispute that neither Dr. Henze nor Wexford had authority to influence UIC’s policies in this respect. Mr. Thomas ultimately saw Dr.

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Related

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Thomas v. Chmell, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/thomas-v-chmell-ilnd-2024.