Fourte v. Faulkner County, Arkansas, et al., No. 13-2241 (8th Cir. 2014)
Annotate this CasePlaintiff, suffering from high-blood pressure, filed suit claiming that he became partially blind after treatment was delayed while in the Faulkner County, Arkansas jail. The court concluded that Dr. Stewart and Nurse Lumpkin were entitled to qualified immunity on plaintiff's medical-screening claim where there was no clearly established right to a general medical screening when admitted to a detention center and where he had less obvious signs of a serious medical condition; the County was was entitled to summary judgment on the medical-screening claim; at best, plaintiff's experts showed that Dr. Stewart and Nurse Lumpkin should have known that they were committing malpractice - but malpractice was not deliberate indifference; Dr. Stewart and Nurse Lumpkin were entitled to qualified immunity on whether medication should have been prescribed after several high blood-pressure readings; Dr. Stewart and Nurse Lumpkin were entitled to qualified immunity on whether they should have responded sooner to the missing medication at issue; at most, Dr. Stewart and Nurse Lumpkin were negligent, but deliberate indifference was more even than gross negligence; and since the County's prescription-delivery system may not be inextricably intertwined with Dr. Stewart and Nurse Lumpkin's treatment of plaintiff, the court lacked jurisdiction over the County's appeal. Accordingly, the court reversed judgment as to Dr. Stewart and Nurse Lumpkin on all claims, and as to the County on the medical-screening and delay-in-treatment claims. The court dismissed for lack of jurisdiction the appeal of the claim against the County for delay in delivery, remanding for further proceedings.
Court Description: Prisoner case - Prisoner civil rights. In an action where plaintiff alleged that delay in treatment of his high blood pressure led to his partial blindness, the defendant doctor and nurse who saw plaintiff at admission were entitled to qualified immunity on his claim that they deliberately disregarded his medical needs by failing to conduct a medical screening at intake as there was insufficient evidence to show that plaintiff suffered a serious medical condition at that time; the County was also entitled to qualified immunity on this claim as the doctor and nurse were the only professionals alleged to have checked plaintiff's condition; with respect to plaintiff's claim that defendants were deliberately indifferent when they failed to prescribe medication after he had several high blood pressure readings, plaintiff's evidence, at most, showed medical malpractice and did not rise to the level of deliberate indifference; similarly, a delay in writing a second prescription for medication was, at most, negligence rather than deliberate indifference; claims with respect to the County's prescription-delivery system were not inextricably intertwined with the doctor's and nurse's treatment of plaintiff and the court lacked jurisdiction over the issue in this interlocutory appeal of qualified immunity issues.
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