Whitney v. Khan

CourtDistrict Court, N.D. Illinois
DecidedJanuary 12, 2021
Docket1:18-cv-04475
StatusUnknown

This text of Whitney v. Khan (Whitney v. Khan) 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
Whitney v. Khan, (N.D. Ill. 2021).

Opinion

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

DEMETRIUS WHITNEY, ) ) Plaintiff, ) ) vs. ) Case No. 18 C 4475 ) FAUZIA KHAN, THOMAS DART, ) and COOK COUNTY, ILLINOIS, ) ) Defendants. )

MEMORANDUM OPINION AND ORDER MATTHEW F. KENNELLY, District Judge: Demetrius Whitney, who was formerly detained at the Cook County Jail, filed suit under 42 U.S.C. § 1983 on behalf of a class of inmates assigned to the Jail's Residential Treatment Unit (RTU) against Dr. Fauzia Khan, the RTU's dentist, Cook County Sheriff Thomas Dart in his official capacity, and Cook County. The claims against Dart and Cook County are made under Monell v. Department of Social Services of the City of New York, 436 U.S. 658 (1978). Whitney contends that a policy of extended delay in referring and scheduling RTU patients for treatment for serious dental conditions violated their Fourteenth Amendment due process rights by causing them unnecessary pain and suffering. In March 2019, the Court certified a class consisting of all those assigned to be treated by the RTU dental clinic from January 1, 2017 to the present who submitted a written Health Service Request Form processed as "urgent" by the RTU dental assistant and did not receive an evaluation by a dentist for at least 14 days after submitting the request. Whitney v. Khan, 330 F.R.D. 172 (N.D. Ill. 2019) ("Whitney I"). After further discovery uncovered evidence indicating that RTU patients requiring oral surgery (largely tooth extractions) experienced further delays, the plaintiffs moved to certify what might loosely be described as an oral surgery subclass. In March 2020, the Court

certified a subclass consisting of members of the certified class who were referred by the RTU dentist to the Stroger Hospital Oral Surgery Clinic. Whitney v. Khan, No. 18 C 4475, 2020 WL 1445610, at *6 (N.D. Ill. Mar. 25, 2020) ("Whitney II"). The subclass has moved for summary judgment as to liability on its Fourteenth Amendment inadequate medical care claim against Dart and Cook County. Background The following facts are undisputed except where otherwise noted. Under Illinois law, Dart is responsible for the operation of the Cook County Jail, and Cook County is responsible for Jail detainees' health and well-being. Before March 2007, the Jail had an on-site oral surgeon and six on-site dentists. During this time period, inmates with

an urgent need for dental care were evaluated by an oral surgeon within seven days. The plaintiffs have produced evidence that a licensed dental hygienist, Anita Birton, scheduled these appointments. Dr. Ronald Townsend, who was a licensed dentist at the Jail in 2006 and later, its chief of dental services, testified during a deposition that budget cuts in 2007 led to a reduction in the Jail's dental staff to one dentist and no on-site oral surgeon. The claims of the class and subclass are largely premised upon their contention that by drastically reducing the on-site dental staff and eliminating the on-site oral surgeon, the Sheriff institutionalized a practice of extended and unreasonable delay in treating RTU detainees with serious dental problems. The Court will focus here on the claims of the subclass, which concern delays in conducting oral surgery on RTU detainees who needed it. Dr. Townsend testified that in 2011, he attempted to recruit an on-site oral

surgeon but was unable to hire one because the salary budgeted for the position was more appropriate for a dentist than an oral surgeon, resulting in an inability to attract candidates for the position. In September 2013, Dr. Jorelle Alexander, the current Cook County Director of Oral Health, e-mailed the Jail's chief dentist and expressed concern about an inefficient oral surgery scheduling process. Dr. Alexander also testified during a deposition that Cook County had not attempted to recruit an oral surgeon between 2016 and at least June 2018. Oral surgeons are trained to perform certain tooth extractions that general dentists do not perform. With no on-site oral surgeon who could perform tooth extractions, Dart and Cook County initiated a new process: referring inmates to Stroger Hospital for tooth extractions.

Beginning in January 2017, the RTU dental clinic began seeing patients for initial evaluations. To schedule an initial evaluation, a detainee completes a Health Service Request Form (HSRF). Dental assistants, who are not licensed healthcare professionals, review the Jail's HSRFs with regard to dental grievances and schedule an appointment for the detainee based on the pain level the detainee has indicated on the HSRF. Defendant Dr. Fauzia Khan, who worked as the RTU dentist and treated patients from January 2017 until September 27, 2019,1 testified that during this period,

1 Dr. Khan performed some tooth extractions when she worked in the RTU, but in April patients experienced delays of up to three to four weeks to initially see the jail dentist after submitting an HSRF. During the relevant period, the members of the subclass were housed in the RTU. Each of the subclass's members experienced significant dental pain and

requested an evaluation by Dr. Khan. They each waited at least fourteen days for their evaluations. In their motion for summary judgment, the plaintiffs reference six exemplar patients whose treatment they offer as reflecting the experience of the subclass as a whole: Robert Burgess, Jacqueline Dunn, Brian Henry, Brian Herron, Magdalena Kotwica, and Nicole Morris. Dr. Khan diagnosed each of the exemplar patients with at least one "abscess," a bacterial infection of the tooth. The exemplar patients contend that an abscess is an urgent condition that requires prompt treatment—an extraction or a root canal procedure. The defendants, in contrast, characterize the patients' conditions as cavities or caries, meaning tooth decay, which are non-urgent conditions, and they describe tooth extraction as a routine, elective procedure.

Dr. Khan referred each of the subclass members to Stroger by entering an electronic referral order for a particular tooth to be extracted. All electronic referral orders for Stroger were received in a queue monitored by Juana Macias, a clerk assigned to Stroger's Referral Support Center. Macias scheduled patients based on the "next available date" offered by the computer—which could be up to twelve weeks for an "elective" procedure. The plaintiffs contend that there are oral surgery appointments at Stroger readily available on short notice but that the defendants' scheduling

2019, Dr. Alexander revoked her tooth extraction privileges. procedure for RTU referrals unreasonably delays treatment. Specifically, the plaintiffs contend that the general public can access Stroger's central scheduling dental hotline and obtain an appointment with an oral surgeon the following day. The defendants argue that the plaintiffs misunderstand this process; they say that a next day

appointment is not guaranteed through the hotline, and even if a person secures one, it is only a consultation appointment, not an extraction appointment. Patients from the RTU, by contrast, have a single appointment at Stroger that includes a tooth extraction. As indicated earlier, in March 2019, Court certified a plaintiff class under Federal Rule of Civil Procedure

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Whitney v. Khan, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/whitney-v-khan-ilnd-2021.