Vega v. Wetzel

CourtDistrict Court, M.D. Pennsylvania
DecidedMarch 1, 2023
Docket1:22-cv-00593
StatusUnknown

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

Bluebook
Vega v. Wetzel, (M.D. Pa. 2023).

Opinion

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

PETER VEGA, : CIVIL ACTION NO. 1:22-CV-593 : Plaintiff : (Judge Conner) : v. : : JOHN E. WETZEL, et al., : : Defendants :

MEMORANDUM

This is a prisoner civil rights case filed pursuant to 42 U.S.C. § 1983. Plaintiff, Peter Vega, alleges that defendant prison officials and medical personnel were deliberately indifferent to a serious medical need and committed medical malpractice when they failed to adequately treat his liver, kidney, and stomach conditions. Defendants Wetzel, Little, Mason, White, Houser, and Doe (“Commonwealth Defendants”) have moved to dismiss, and Vega has moved for leave to supplement. The motions will be granted. I. Factual Background & Procedural History

Vega has been incarcerated in Mahanoy State Correctional Institution (“SCI- Mahanoy”) at all relevant times. According to the complaint, he began seeing defendant Loscalzo, a doctor in the prison, for medical treatment beginning in 2020. (Doc. 1 at 6). Loscalzo purportedly diagnosed Vega with an unspecified liver disease and other unspecified illnesses. (Id.) Prior to Vega beginning treatment with Loscalzo, defendant Williams, a physician’s assistant in the prison, allegedly prescribed him Pravastatin and Gemfibrozil, which can purportedly cause severe side effects when taken together. (Id.) The complaint asserts that Loscalzo told Williams to discontinue these prescriptions, but that Williams declined to do so. (Id.)

In April or May of 2020, Vega was allegedly taken to the prison’s medical department because he was vomiting and experiencing pain in his abdomen. (Id. at 7). He remained there for observation overnight before being seen by Loscalzo the following morning. (Id.) Loscalzo sent Vega to the emergency room at Lehigh Valley Hospital. (Id.) He was admitted and hospitalized for five days due to an obstruction in his stomach. (Id.) This obstruction had allegedly been observed by SCI-Mahanoy medical personnel prior to this incident but had been dismissed as a

passing stomach virus. (Id.) A week after returning from the hospital, Vega met with Loscalzo to discuss the results of blood testing and ultrasounds that were performed at the hospital. (Id.) Loscalzo ordered additional blood testing to determine the cause of other health issues found by hospital staff. (Id.) After receiving the results of the blood tests, Loscalso purportedly told Vega that he had diabetes and liver problems. (Id.)

Loscalzo ordered a series of blood tests to determine whether the liver problems were caused by hepatitis or HIV. (Id.) All of these tests were negative. (Id. at 7-8). The complaint avers that during one of Vega’s appointments, Loscalzo checked his medical records and stated, “I told PA. Williams to take you off this medication,” purportedly in reference to Vega’s Pravastatin and Gemfibrozil prescriptions. (Id. at 8). Loscalzo immediately discontinued Vega’s Pravastatin prescription. (Id.) Sometime after Loscalzo discontinued the prescription, defendant Bora, another physician in the prison, prescribed Vega Lipitor and Aldactone, which allegedly cause similarly harmful side effects. (Id. at 23). During this meeting, Loscalzo purportedly concluded that Vega had an

unspecified liver disease and referred him for an appointment with Dr. Macelli, an oncologist at Lehigh Valley Hospital. (Id. at 8). Prior to being seen by Macelli, Vega was sent to Lehigh Valley Hospital on an unspecified date for complaints of abdominal and liver pain. (Id.) The doctor who examined him allegedly diagnosed him with liver scarring, cirrhosis of the liver, and a fatty liver. (Id.) In October 2020, Vega had a telemedicine appointment with Macelli, who referred him to a liver specialist for a biopsy and endoscopy. (Id.)

Sometime in January or February of 2021, Vega was allegedly transported to Geisinger Medical Center, where he was seen by Dr. Shah. (Id.) Dr. Shah allegedly did not examine Vega or ask him any questions but asked his assistant why Vega had been brought to the hospital. (Id. at 8-9). The assistant responded that Vega had been sent for treatment of his liver conditions. (Id. at 9). Shah supposedly told the correctional officers escorting Vega to return him to SCI-Mahanoy, but before

they left Vega asked him whether the biopsy and endoscopy recommended by Macelli could be performed at the hospital. (Id.) Shah, after confirming with his supervisor that the procedures could be performed at the hospital, scheduled them for April 2021. (Id.) Several months later, Vega had a telemedicine appointment with Macelli and defendant Badick, a physician employed by the prison. (Id.) Vega asked them about the biopsy and endoscopy. (Id.) Badick responded that someone had canceled the appointment. (Id.) He rescheduled it for a later date, but the complaint asserts that the biopsy and endoscopy were never done. (Id.) Defendant Bora began employment with the prison as a physician and began

treating Vega around this time. (Id.) Vega asked Bora why he was having liver complications after being in prison for 35 years. (Id. at 9-10). Bora supposedly stated that Vega was a heavy drinker when he was younger and that liver complications could arise from heavy drinking “even after 50 years.” (Id. at 10). Vega responded that he had never been a heavy drinker. (Id.) Sometime after this visit, he went to the medical department based on complaints that he was feeling sick. (Id.) Defendant Williams examined him and purportedly stated that there was

nothing the medical department could do to treat his liver condition and that the liver was “very enlarged.” (Id.) Sometime in June or July of 2021, Vega attended an appointment with defendant Badick, who allegedly stated that Vega might need to have his gallbladder removed. (Id. at 18). The complaint avers that Vega waited for treatment for “several months” before he was transported to Geisinger Medical Center on November 8, 2021, for an

appointment with Shah. (Id. at 10). Staff at the hospital informed the correctional officers escorting Vega that there was no appointment scheduled that day. (Id.) Vega was transported back to the prison. (Id.) On November 16, 2021, Vega had a telemedicine appointment with Macelli and Bora. (Id. at 11). Bora explained that the appointment with Shah had been canceled because Geisinger needed to switch doctors to treat Vega. (Id.) Macelli stated that he wished to have the biopsy and endoscopy performed on Vega to determine whether Vega had cancer, but stated that it was up to the prison’s medical department to ensure that Vega was able to attend the appointments. (Id.) On December 9, 2021, Vega met with defendant Williams and “Aby,” the

assistant to the prison’s correctional health care administrator. (Id.) Aby said she had spoken with Shah, who allegedly stated that the biopsy and endoscopy were no longer necessary. (Id.) Vega continued to feel abdominal, kidney, and liver pain. (Id.) He attended a sick call in the medical department in January 2022 where he was examined by physician’s assistant Westly Kiepea. (Id. at 12). Kiepea obtained a urine sample from Vega, which tested positive for blood and kidney infections. (Id.) Kiepea prescribed him antibiotics and Motrin, ordered blood testing, and told him

to come back ten days later if the pain continued. (Id. at 12-13). Vega returned to the medical department twelve days later, where he was examined by defendant Christina Houser, the prison’s correctional health care administrator. (Id. at 13). Houser allegedly obtained a urine sample from Vega, which was positive for kidney and blood infections. (Id.) Houser, after unsuccessfully attempting to have an outside physician examine Vega that night,

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Vega v. Wetzel, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/vega-v-wetzel-pamd-2023.