Torres v. Baldwin

CourtDistrict Court, S.D. Illinois
DecidedMarch 31, 2023
Docket3:19-cv-00299
StatusUnknown

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

Bluebook
Torres v. Baldwin, (S.D. Ill. 2023).

Opinion

IN THE UNITED STATES DISTRICT COURT FOR THE SOUTHERN DISTRICT OF ILLINOIS

JUAN J. TORRES, ) ) Plaintiff, ) ) vs. ) Case No. 3:19-CV-299-MAB ) BOBBY BLUM and ROB JEFREYS, ) in his official capacity, ) ) Defendants. )

MEMORANDUM AND ORDER

BEATTY, Magistrate Judge: This matter is currently before the Court on Plaintiff Juan Torres’s motion for partial summary judgment (Doc. 105), and Defendants Bobby Blum and Rob Jeffreys’ motions for summary judgment (Docs. 106, 108). BACKGROUND Plaintiff Juan Torres is an inmate of the Illinois Department of Corrections and currently incarcerated at Pinckneyville Correctional Center. In March 2019, he filed a pro se civil rights complaint (Doc. 1). Following a threshold review of the complaint, see 28 U.S.C. § 1915A, Plaintiff was permitted to proceed on the following claims: Count 1: Bob Blum violated the Eighth Amendment when he was deliberately indifferent to Plaintiff’s urinary tract infection in 2018;

Count 2: The Director of IDOC violated the Americans with Disabilities Act (“ADA”), and the Rehabilitation Act (“Rehab Act”) by failing to have handicap accessible bathrooms on the yard.

(Doc. 8). Plaintiff filed a motion seeking summary judgment on his ADA/Rehab Act claim (Doc. 105). Before filing a response in opposition to Plaintiff’s motion (Doc. 116),

Defendant Rob Jeffreys filed his own motion for summary judgment on the ADA/Rehab Act claim (Doc. 109). Plaintiff filed a response in opposition to Jeffreys’ motion for summary judgment (Doc. 117), to which Jeffreys filed a reply (Doc. 120). Defendant Bob Blum likewise filed a motion for summary judgment on Plaintiff’s claim for deliberate indifference (Doc. 106; see also Doc. 107). Plaintiff filed a response in opposition (Doc. 118), to which Defendant Blum filed a reply (Doc. 119).

FACTS Plaintiff Juan Torres has been wheelchair-bound since 2016, due to spine issues and weakness in his right leg (Doc. 105-1, pp. 74, 75; Doc. 105-2). Plaintiff has been incarcerated at Pinckneyville Correctional Center (“Pinckneyville”) since December 1, 2017 (Doc. 105-1, pp. 73–74; see also Doc. 109-1, p. 1). P

A. Deliberate Indifference Claim Plaintiff had prostate surgery in 2017 while he was incarcerated at Cook County Jail (Doc. 107-1, pp. 10–11; Doc. 118-4). Since his surgery, Plaintiff uses a catheter to urinate (Doc. 118-4). He must insert the catheter each time he has to urinate and then remove it when he is finished (Id.). He also has recurrent urinary symptoms since his

surgery, such as blood in his urine, strong-smelling urine, cloudy urine, pain, burning, and itching with urination (Id.).1 Plaintiff testified that under normal circumstances, he urinates approximately seven times a day and inserting and removing the catheter is

painful (Id.). When he is experiencing the urinary symptoms, however, he urinates approximately 12-13 times a day and insertion and removal of the catheter is more painful than normal (Id.). Plaintiff testified, and medical records corroborated, that in April 2017, when he was experiencing urinary symptoms and his urine culture was positive for E.coli, a physician at Cook County Hospital diagnosed him with a UTI and prescribed antibiotics (ciprofloxacin) (Doc. 118-5).

Plaintiff testified via affidavit that in January 2018, he began experiencing pain, burning, and itching when he urinated, increased urination, and strong-smelling urine (Doc. 118-4). On January 23, 2018, he presented to nurse sick call complaining of “burning [with] urination” (Doc. 107-4, p. 4; see also Doc. 107-5, p. 22–23; Doc. 118-4). His vital signs were normal with the exception of his blood pressure (Doc. 107-4, p. 4; Doc. 107-5, p. 24).

The nurse, Brenda Gale, had Plaintiff submit a urine sample and she advised him to drink at least eight glasses of water daily (Doc. 107-4, p. 4; Doc. 107-5, p. 22; Doc. 118-4). The urine specimen was sent off to a lab for a urinalysis and culture and sensitivity and the nurse also had the Nurse Practitioner evaluate a urine dipstick that day (Doc. 107-4, p. 4; Doc. 107-5, p. 22; Doc. 118-4).2 Bob Blum was the Nurse Practitioner at Pinckneyville at

1 Dr. Jasmeet Singh, and outside physician who was involved in Plaintiff’s care at Good Samaritan Hospital, testified that individuals who self-catheterize are at increased risk of UTIs because they are repeatedly introducing a foreign entity into the urinary tract (Doc. 107-6, p. 63).

2 Dr. Singh testified that a dipstick is “sort of a screening tool to analyze urine samples in the office” (Doc. 107-6, p. 39). The laboratory urinalysis provides a more detailed, comprehensive evaluation of a patient’s urine sample (Id. at pp. 41–42). this time (Doc. 107-5, p. 34). The results of the dipstick showed a couple abnormalities, specifically, Plaintiff’s urine was positive for nitrites and had trace amounts of protein

(Doc. 107-4, p. 5; Doc. 107-5, pp. 31–32). Both NP Blum and Dr. Jasmeet Singh testified that the positive nitrites could be a false positive and the dipstick did not definitively identify a UTI (Doc. 107-5, pp. 34–35, 80–81; Doc. 105-6, p. 39). NP Blum testified that a UTI is not diagnosed based on the results of a urinalysis alone, particularly for someone like Plaintiff who is male and used catheters (Doc. 107-5, pp. 34–35, 80–81). Dr. Singh agreed (Doc. 107-6, pp. 34–35, 39, 100–01). The medical

provider must investigate and consider the patient’s entire presentation, including the patient’s reported urinary symptoms (such as pain or burning when urinating, increased frequency, foul-smelling urine), a urinalysis and urine culture, and findings on physical examination (including fever, abdominal or suprapubic tenderness, or rapid heart rate) (Doc. 107-5, pp. 80–81, 82; Doc. 105-6, pp. 35–36, 68–100–101).

On January 26th, Plaintiff saw NP Blum (Doc. 107-4, p. 8; Doc. 107-5, p. 49). NP Blum noted that Plaintiff had no fever (“afebrile”) or rapid heart rate (“not tachycardic”), his abdomen was round, soft, and non-tender, he had positive bowel sounds, and negative dysuria (Doc. 107-4, p. 8; Doc. 107-5, pp. 102–03) (emphasis added).3 NP Blum testified that he recorded “negative dysuria” because that is what Plaintiff reported to him (Doc.

107-5, p. 67). NP Blum stated that did not diagnose Plaintiff with a UTI that day because

3 Dr. Singh testified that “dysuria” could mean “a number of things[, but] primarily it’s used to describe painful urination” (Doc. 107-6, p. 18; see also id. at p. 68). NP Blum likewise testified that “dysuria” was “painful urination” (Doc. 107-5. P. 29). he “did not see a UTI at that time” (Id. at p. 68). “When he had negative dysuria, [NP Blum] no longer believed that he had a UTI” (Id. at p. 69). But Plaintiff testified that he

does not know what “dysuria” means (Doc. 107-2, p. 64). Plaintiff said that he asked NP Blum for the urinalysis results, Blum “checked some paper,” and then told him that he “was positive,” which Plaintiff assumed to mean that he had a UTI (Doc. 118-4; Doc. 107- 2, pp. 39–40). Plaintiff testified that he asked Blum for antibiotics and Blum said no and that he should continue to drink lots of water (Doc. 118-4; Doc. 107-2, p. 40). NP Blum testified that he did not recall telling Plaintiff to drink lots of water, but he probably did

(Doc. 107-5, p. 51). On the same day that Plaintiff saw NP Blum, the University of Illinois faxed the results of the laboratory urinalysis to Pinckneyville (Doc. 107-4, pp. 6–7; Doc. 107-5, p. 37), but apparently the results were not received or reviewed by anyone at the prison for several days (see Doc. 107-4, p. 9; Doc. 107-5, pp. 40–41). On January 29th, Plaintiff

requested the results of his urinalysis, but they were not yet in his chart (Doc. 107-4, p. 9).

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