Johannes v. Heyns et al
Filing
387
OPINION and ORDER Granting in Part and Denying in Part Defendants' Motion for Summary Judgment 363 and Denying Plaintiffs' Motion for Summary Judgment 366 (Limited Discovery due by 4/30/2023) Signed by District Judge Laurie J. Michelson. (EPar)
Case 2:14-cv-11691-LJM-JJCG ECF No. 387, PageID.15495 Filed 01/26/23 Page 1 of 77
UNITED STATES DISTRICT COURT
EASTERN DISTRICT OF MICHIGAN
SOUTHERN DIVISION
MELVIN BOWNES,
ANTHONY RICHARDSON,
TIMOTHY BROWNELL, and
JAMES GUNNELS,
on behalf of themselves and those
similarly situated,
Case No. 14-11691
Honorable Laurie J. Michelson
Magistrate Judge Jonathan J.C. Grey
Plaintiffs,
v.
HEIDI WASHINGTON and
JONG CHOI,
Defendants.
OPINION AND ORDER GRANTING IN PART AND DENYING IN PART
DEFENDANTS’ MOTION FOR SUMMARY JUDGMENT [363] AND
DENYING PLAINTIFFS’ MOTION FOR SUMMARY JUDGMENT [366]
Plaintiffs Melvin Bownes, Anthony Richardson, James Gunnels, and Timothy
Brownell each claim that they have not received adequate dental care while in the
custody of the Michigan Department of Corrections. In fact, they maintain that
Defendants MDOC Director Heidi Washington and MDOC Dental Director Jong Choi
are deliberately indifferent to their serious dental problems. In Plaintiffs’ view, this
makes their incarceration the type of “cruel and unusual punishment[]” prohibited
by the Eighth Amendment of the U.S. Constitution.
And Plaintiffs say they are not unique in this regard. In fact, each represents
a class of hundreds if not thousands of inmates who have dental conditions like theirs
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and who believe they too are not being provided dental care that comports with the
Constitution.
Primarily, Plaintiffs challenge three aspects of MDOC’s dental care. One is
MDOC’s policy that inmates are not eligible for routine dental care during their first
two years of imprisonment. Plaintiffs also claim that MDOC neither adequately
diagnoses nor adequately treats periodontal disease (gum disease). And, they say,
MDOC does not adequately diagnose or treat caries (tooth decay). Due to these
alleged deficiencies in dental care, Plaintiffs say that MDOC inmates will experience
serious harm like an abscess or tooth loss or, at a minimum, they are at substantial
risk of experiencing those serious harms.
As relief, Plaintiffs do not seek damages. Instead, they seek to improve the
dental care provided by MDOC going forward. Or in legal terms, they seek a
prospective injunction. They ask the Court to order MDOC to change its dental
policies and practices so that they are no longer subject to cruel and unusual
punishment.
After nine years of litigation, this case has finally reached the summaryjudgment stage. Both sides seek summary judgment in their favor. Defendants argue
that no reasonable factfinder could conclude that they have violated the Eighth
Amendment. While Defendants have made a strong case for summary judgment, and
while certain claims will be dismissed, the Court will deny their motion for the most
part. And Plaintiffs’ motion for summary judgment will be denied. The Court justifies
these rulings, in painstaking detail, below.
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Background
Because this case centers on the two-year rule, the treatment and diagnosis of
periodontal disease, and the treatment and diagnosis of caries, a thorough
understanding of these concepts is necessary.
The Two-Year Rule
In 2013, about a year before this suit was filed, MDOC instituted a policy that
made inmates ineligible for “routine” dental care until they completed two years of
uninterrupted incarceration. See (ECF No. 363-10, PageID.9536); MDOC Dental
Service Manual at 4 (eff. Dec. 19, 2017), available at (ECF No. 363-2, PageID.8858).
Generally speaking, 15 to 20 percent of MDOC’s inmates serve less than two years in
prison or, at least, have a minimum sentence of two years or less. (See ECF No. 36310, PageID.9507; ECF No. 384, PageID.15415.) Before the two-year rule was
implemented, there were almost 15,000 inmates on the waitlist for dental care. (ECF
No. 363-10, PageID.9534.) Following implementation of the rule, the waitlist dropped
to about 6,700 inmates. (ECF No. 363-10, PageID.9534.)
Inmates subject to the two-year rule are still entitled to “emergency” and
“urgent” dental services; but they do not receive “routine” dental services.
“Generally,” urgent needs include “facial swelling, oral facial trauma, uncontrolled
postoperative bleeding, or significant pain or discomfort.” MDOC Policy Directive
04.06.150 ¶ D (eff. May 1, 2018) available at (ECF No. 363-3). In contrast, “routine”
dental services include “[l]imited diagnostic, restorative, periodontal, prosthetic, and
non-urgent oral surgical procedures.” Id. at ¶ C. Dental care for urgent (and
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emergent) needs are provided to inmates at any point during their incarceration—
even if they have served less than two years. Id. at ¶ L.
Three aspects of the two-year rule should be highlighted.
First, prisoners are required to serve two years before requesting a “complete”
dental exam. When an inmate enters the correctional system, MDOC performs an
“intake” or screening dental exam, which is not as thorough as a complete exam. At
the intake exam, a dentist reviews the new inmate’s dental-health history, completes
a visual inspection for (among other things) periodontal disease and caries, and
instructs on oral hygiene. Policy Directive 04.06.150 ¶ J. If the intake exam reveals
an urgent dental need, the inmate is referred to MDOC’s stabilization clinic where
the urgent need can be addressed. Id. at ¶ K. In contrast, in a complete exam, dentists
take more detailed “bitewing” x-rays and create a treatment plan. MDOC Dental
Services Manual at 11 (eff. Dec. 19, 2017); (ECF No. 363-10, PageID.9446).
Although inmates become eligible for a complete exam after serving two years,
they are not provided that exam at the two-year mark but are instead placed on a
waitlist. Thus, about 50% of inmates do not receive their complete exam until after
28 months in prison and about 25% of inmates wait even longer for their complete
exam, 34 months. (ECF No. 384, PageID.15446.) After the first complete exam, an
inmate is eligible for one “periodic” exam each year. Dental Services Manual at 17.
Second, inmates are not eligible for a periodontitis treatment called “scaling
and root planing” until they serve two years in prison. See Policy Directive 04.06.150
¶ M.3; (ECF No. 363-10, PageID.9414–9415 (Choi discussing ¶ M.3)). If the intake
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exam reveals urgent periodontitis, the stabilization clinic will only provide a
“debridement,” which is a different type of cleaning than a scaling and root planing.
(See ECF No. 363-5, PageID.8988–8989, 9010–9011; ECF No. 374-7, PageID.12862.)
During the two-year period, inmates can make an urgent care request and so it is
possible that a dentist could prescribe a scaling and root planing in connection with
that request. But neither party has indicated how often this occurs.
A third aspect of the two-year rule is particularly relevant to the pending
motions: many (if not most) inmates will not receive fillings for their cavities until
they serve two years in prison. See Policy Directive 04.06.150 ¶ M. According to Carla
Maxwell, a dentist that conducts intake examinations and provides treatment at the
stabilization clinic, if a cavity is too shallow to be urgent, a filling is not provided; and
if the cavity is so deep that the tooth is not restorable, the tooth is extracted. (See
ECF No. 363-5, PageID.9040, 9058.) But, says Maxwell, there are circumstances
where, during the two-year period, the cavity is deep enough to be urgent, but not so
deep to warrant extraction, and so a filling is provided. (ECF No. 363-5, PageID.9042,
9059; see also ECF No. 363-10, PageID.9340 (Choi describing when a filling would be
provided at the stabilization clinic).)
Periodontal Disease
What is Periodontal Disease?
For purposes of this case, periodontal disease consists of periodontitis and
gingivitis.
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Basically, gingivitis causes inflammation of the gums. (See ECF No. 366-6,
PageID.10833.) One way to diagnose gingivitis is to touch the gums with a dental
probe; in patients with gingivitis, the gums will bleed. (ECF No. 374-8, PageID.12942;
ECF No. 366-6, PageID.10791.) Gingivitis is reversible and painless. (ECF No. 384,
PageID.15383, 15422–15423.) Treatments for gingivitis include good oral hygiene
and a gingivitis-specific cleaning that removes calculus—essentially bacteria that has
hardened itself—from above and below the gumline. (ECF No. 374-8, PageID.12943;
ECF No. 366-2, PageID.9865–9866.)
Periodontitis is a disease that attacks the alveolar bone and periodontal
ligament, which are structures that hold the tooth in place. (ECF No. 384,
PageID.15380–15381.) This drawing shows a healthy alveolar bone, ligament, and
tooth and those same structures attacked by periodontitis:
(ECF No. 384, PageID.15381.) As periodontitis progresses, the ligament and bone are
increasingly damaged. This results in a “pocket” or “loss of attachment” between the
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tooth’s root and the gums. (See ECF No. 384, PageID.15381.) This loss of attachment
distinguishes periodontitis from gingivitis. (ECF No. 374-8, PageID.12943.) These
pockets permit harmful calculus to form on the tooth’s root (the portion of the tooth
below the normal gumline). (See ECF No. 366-3, PageID.9950; ECF No. 384,
PageID.15426 n.197.) The damage caused to the alveolar ligament and bone by
periodontitis is not reversible. (ECF No. 366-6, PageID.10830.)
Periodontitis is a stealthy disease: usually it is not painful until it reaches an
advanced stage. (ECF No. 384, PageID.15420.) Thus, if a patient is not informed that
she has periodontitis, she might not seek treatment for it until an abscess forms or
her teeth have become loose. (ECF No. 384, PageID.15422–15423; ECF No. 366-3,
PageID.9904.) At that point, the teeth are often not salvageable absent advanced
surgical procedures. (ECF No. 384, PageID.15425 n.191.)
As a result of a “World Workshop” for periodontology in 2017, periodontitis is
now categorized in three dimensions: stage, grade, and extent. Stage is a measure of
severity. Stage I is the least severe (“a borderland between gingivitis and
periodontitis”) and Stage IV the most severe (significant alveolar bone loss and,
possibly, tooth loss). (ECF No. 384, PageID.15386–15387.) Grade is a measure of how
fast the disease is progressing, with Grade A for slow progression and Grade C for
rapid. (ECF No. 384, PageID.15388.) Several individualized factors—referred to as
“host” factors—affect the rate of progression. (ECF No. 384, PageID.15388; ECF No.
366-2, PageID.9872.) Among these host factors are smoking, diabetes, and oral
hygiene. (Id.; ECF No. 384, PageID.15388.) As for extent, that is a measure of how
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many teeth (and which) the disease is attacking; periodontitis can be localized to a
few teeth or generalized throughout the mouth. (See ECF No. 384, PageID.15387.)
Although neither party has discussed it, the concept of “active” periodontitis
may explain some of the inconsistent diagnoses in inmates’ dental charts.
Periodontitis is a chronic disease, but treatment may make the disease “stable” or,
given the parties’ heated debate over that term, treatment may greatly slow the
disease. (ECF No. 374-8, PageID.12954; ECF No. 366-7, PageID.10980–10981.) Thus,
it appears that a dentist might diagnose say, moderate periodontitis based on bone
loss, but that diagnosis does not necessarily mean the disease is active. (ECF No. 3666, PageID.10869, 10871.) And, while also not addressed by the parties, it appears that
only “active” periodontitis requires immediate treatment. (ECF No. 366-6,
PageID.10741 (Johnston testifying that after treatment, the patient is “reevaluate[d]
to find out which sites are active or which sites are stable” and that treatment is
discontinued for stable sites); ECF No. 363-5, PageID.8990–8991 (Maxwell testifying
that “moderate bone loss” is “moderate periodontal disease” but that “just because
you have whatever percent bone loss you have, does not mean you are in an acute
situation”); ECF No. 366-7, PageID.10980–10981 (Gillette testifying that a patient
can “have periodontal disease but they don’t need treatment”).)
Periodontitis is a common disease. About 45% of the adult population have
some form of the disease. (See ECF No. 384, PageID.15381 & n.14.) But in correctional
populations, there is a higher percentage of people with moderate to severe
periodontal disease than in the general population. (ECF No. 384, PageID.15383.)
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Left untreated, periodontitis can result in periodontal abscesses (ECF No. 384,
PageID.15423, 15424–15425 n.51, 15467) and tooth loss (ECF No. 384,
PageID.15376).
How is Periodontitis Diagnosed?
Diagnosis of Periodontitis Generally. Periodontitis is diagnosed based on
several factors. Some of the factors—inflammation of the gums and the patient’s oral
health history—do not require a dentist to use any special tools. (See ECF No. 363-8,
PageID.9217.) But a pair of tools for diagnosing periodontitis lie at the heart of this
case: periodontal probing and “bitewing” x-rays.
Take probing first. Periodontal probing is the process of measuring pocket
depths in millimeters using a periodontal probe. (See ECF No. 384, PageID.15381.)
In other words, the probe is placed in the space between the tooth and the gums to
check how deep the probe goes. Some might recall their hygienist reading out
numbers as he works his way around the mouth, “3, 2, 3; 2, 1, 2; . . .”; that process is
periodontal probing and charting. A “periodontal screening and recording” or “PSR”
(not to be confused with “SRP,” a treatment for periodontitis) is an abbreviated
probing and charting used by many correctional departments and the military. (ECF
No. 384, PageID.15382.) A PSR takes only a couple of minutes to complete. (ECF No.
366-9, PageID.11466.) In contrast, a comprehensive periodontal probing and charting
involves measuring and recording six pocket depths of every tooth. (ECF No. 366-6,
PageID.10718, 10833.) But even this more comprehensive process takes less than ten
minutes. (ECF No. 363-10, PageID.9444; ECF No. 366-9, PageID.11465.)
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It is standard practice to perform periodontal probing to diagnose periodontitis.
One of Plaintiffs’ experts, Jay Shulman, DMD, opines, “[periodontal probing has been
the] standard of care for ages.” (ECF No. 374-8, PageID.12953.) In his opinion, “You
cannot
diagnose
periodontal
disease
without
probing.”
(ECF
No.
374-8,
PageID.12953.) Stephen Harrel, DDS, Plaintiffs’ other expert, similarly opines that
periodontal disease cannot be diagnosed “without the use of a periodontal probe to
measure the depth” of the “space between the gum and the tooth/root.” (ECF No. 3662, PageID.9859; see also id. at PageID.9923 (opining that without probing, there were
no situations where periodontal disease could be accurately diagnosed).) And even
Defendants’ expert, Jeffrey Johnston, DDS, believes that the “standard of care”
(which he agreed was “the minimum diagnostic and treatment process that a clinician
should follow” for a particular illness (ECF No. 366-6, PageID.10680)) required
dentists to use probing to diagnose periodontitis. (ECF No. 366-6, PageID.10765,
10850 (“I would agree that the probing is a standard of care”).)
Moreover, several MDOC dentists conceded that in private practice generally,
or at least at their private practices, periodontal probing is performed to diagnose
periodontal disease. (See e.g., ECF No. 366-7, PageID.10979 (Gillette), ECF No. 3635, PageID.8995, 9002 (Maxwell), ECF No. 366-5, PageID.10476 (Minnich).) Even
Jong Choi, MDOC’s Dental Director and the primary defendant in this case, conceded
that in private practice generally, and at his private practice specifically, periodontal
probing is used to diagnose periodontal disease. (ECF No. 363-10, PageID.9346, 9444;
see also id. at PageID.9323.)
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Dentists also use x-rays to diagnose periodontitis. Two types of x-rays are at
issue in this case. One is the panoramic x-ray, which, as the name suggests, is taken
by a device rotating in a half circle around the patient’s head; the result is an image
of the entire mouth and upper and lower jaw. The other is the “bitewing” x-ray, which
is taken by placing a device inside the patient’s mouth; the result is an image of just
a few teeth in one area of the mouth. Here is a panoramic x-ray and a bitewing x-ray:
Panoramic
Bitewing
(ECF No. 384, PageID.15400–15401.)
Although Plaintiffs’ experts made compound statements—referencing both
probing and x-rays at once—it appears that they also believe that periodontitis
cannot be accurately diagnosed without bitewing x-rays. For instance, Shulman
opines that under “professional standards,” a periodontitis treatment plan would be
based on “probing and bitewing x-rays.” (ECF No. 384, PageID.15402, 15434.) He
further opines that without “bitewing x-rays and periodontal probing,” a patient’s
periodontitis might be underdiagnosed. (ECF No. 384, PageID.15485.) Harrel, also
one of Plaintiffs’ experts, believes that “the use of only panoramic radiographs for
periodontal diagnosis is inadequate and below the standard of care.” (ECF No. 366-2,
PageID.9872.)
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Defendants’ expert disagrees—to an extent. Johnston believes that if a
panoramic x-ray is of “diagnostic” quality, it can be used to stage periodontitis and,
in more advanced cases, even diagnose it. (See ECF No. 366-6, PageID.10782; see also
id. at PageID.10800, 10809.) Thus, Johnston believes that diagnosing periodontitis
with a high-resolution panoramic x-ray and probing—as opposed to bitewing x-rays
and probing—would not necessarily violate the standard of care. (See ECF No. 3666, PageID.10783, 10785, 10850, 10857–10858.)
MDOC Diagnosis of Periodontitis. At the intake exam, probing is not used to
diagnose periodontitis. (ECF No. 363-10, PageID.9291–9292, 9326 (Choi); ECF No.
363-5, PageID.8985, 9157 (Maxwell, intake dentist).) Bitewing x-rays are not taken
at the intake exam, either. (ECF No. 363-5, PageID.9158 (Maxwell); ECF No. 363-10,
PageID.9324–9325 (Choi).) Instead, MDOC takes a panoramic x-ray, which Shulman
concedes is “high resolution for a pano.” (ECF No. 374-8, PageID.12936.) Thus,
MDOC’s intake dentists assess periodontitis by conducting a visual inspection of the
mouth (aided by a dental mirror), a review of the inmate’s oral-health history, and a
review of the panoramic x-ray. (ECF No. 363-10, PageID.9321, 9362 (Choi).)
Following that exam, MDOC dentists designate inmates as having normal gums,
gingivitis, early periodontitis, stable moderate periodontitis, unstable moderate
periodontitis, or advanced periodontal disease. (ECF No. 384, PageID.15418
(Shulman); ECF No. 363-10, PageID.9505 (Choi memorandum).)
At the first complete exam, which takes place after serving two-and-half years
or so in prison, MDOC dentists do take bitewing x-rays. But probing is still not
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regularly performed. (ECF No. 363-10, PageID.9326 (Choi testifying that at a
complete exam, there are no periodontal measurements and that pocket depths are
not recorded); see also ECF No. 384, PageID.15421 (Shulman).) And if probing is
performed, the pocket depths are not usually recorded, meaning that there are no
baseline depths to track periodontitis progression. (ECF No. 363-10, PageID.9326;
ECF No. 384, PageID.15421.)
Thus, to summarize, MDOC dentists diagnose periodontitis at intake without
the benefit of periodontal probing or bitewing x-rays. At complete exams, MDOC
dentists do use bitewing x-rays to diagnose periodontitis but rarely perform
periodontal probing. Moreover, pocket depths are generally not recorded at any point
during an inmate’s incarceration.
How is Periodontitis Treated?
Before describing periodontitis treatment, some additional terminology is in
order. Plaintiffs stress that “prophylaxis,” “debridement,” and “scaling and root
planing” are three different procedures. And at least according to Current Dental
Terminology codes published by the American Dental Association, they are correct.
Under the CDT, a “debridement” involves “the preliminary removal of plaque and
calculus that interferes with the ability of the dentist to perform a comprehensive
oral evaluation.” (ECF No. 366-2, PageID.9866.) And a “prophylaxis” is defined as the
“[r]emoval of plaque, calculus, and stains from the tooth structures”—apparently a
standard cleaning at, say, a six-month checkup. (ECF No. 366-2, PageID.9865.) In
contrast to debridement and prophylaxis, “scaling and root planing” “involves
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instrumentation of the crown and root surfaces of the teeth to remove plaque and
calculus from these surfaces.” (ECF No. 366-2, PageID.9866 (emphasis added).)
Scaling and root planing is “therapeutic, not prophylactic, in nature” and is intended
to be performed only when there is loss of attachment between the tooth and gums—
otherwise “there is no exposed root surface to plane.” (ECF No. 366-2, PageID.9866–
9867.) In other words, while prophylaxis, debridement, and scaling and root planing
all involve scaling the teeth to remove calculus, scaling and root planing is a specific
treatment for periodontitis and necessarily includes going into the pocket formed by
the disease and removing the tissue from the tooth root that has been permeated with
calculus. (See ECF No. 366-2, PageID.9866–9867 (Harrel); ECF No. 366-3,
PageID.9916–9917 (Harrel); ECF No. 384, PageID.15426 (Shulman); ECF No. 366-6,
PageID.10734 (Johnston).)
According to Plaintiffs’ experts, neither prophylaxis nor debridement suffices
to treat periodontitis. (ECF No. 366-3, PageID.9914, 9962, 9971 (Harrel); ECF No.
384, PageID.15424–15426 (Shulman).) And, on this point, it appears that Johnston,
Defendants’ expert, agrees. (ECF No. 366-6, PageID.10750–10751 (agreeing
debridement is not a treatment for “periodontal disease” and that a debridement
would violate the standard of care for treating periodontitis); ECF No. 366-6,
PageID.10724 (testifying that prophylaxis is a treatment for gingivitis).) Moreover,
the experts largely agree that, typically, local anesthesia is used to perform a scaling
and root planing, further distinguishing that treatment from prophylaxis and
debridement. (ECF No. 384, PageID.15405 (Shulman); ECF No. 366-6, PageID.10734
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(Johnston).) The evidence also suggests that scaling and root planing takes longer
than a prophylaxis or debridement. (See ECF No. 384, PageID.15425 (Shulman); ECF
No. 366-6, PageID.10726, 10736 (Johnston).)
Before 2020, MDOC dental staff might not have treated periodontitis with
scaling and root planing or, at least, did not document “scaling and root planing”
when they performed that procedure. Shulman reviewed 100 inmates’ dental records
from before 2020. (ECF No. 384, PageID.15432.) According to him, 61 of these 100
inmates were diagnosed with periodontitis at a complete exam, yet only a prophylaxis
was documented on their charts. (ECF No. 315-11, PageID.8020.) In some of the
dental records Shulman reviewed, the term “perio scale” appeared. (ECF No. 384,
PageID.15465; ECF No. 374-8, PageID.12955.) But in Shulman’s opinion, “perio
scale” has “no clear definition” and “appears closer to an extended prophy” than a
scaling and root planing. (ECF No. 384, PageID.15470.)
According to Choi, MDOC’s Dental Director, there is a simple explanation for
this. Prior to 2020, MDOC dentists and hygienists would use “prophylaxis,”
“debridement,” and “perio scale” interchangeably and that each of these terms could
include scaling and root planing. (ECF No. 374-9, PageID.13074, 13079.) Choi
explains, “scaling and root planing versus prophylaxis, they are all the same teeth
cleaning . . . . [A]s MDOC[,] we have been using the gross terminology as ‘perio scaling’
or ‘scaling’ or ‘prophy’ for all the situations, because we did not differentiate each
terminology from one case to another.” (ECF No. 374-9, PageID.13074.) “[The] bottom
line,” says Choi, “can be summarized as one word, a patient received a teeth cleaning,
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our hygienists clean the teeth as needed.” (ECF No. 374-9, PageID.13074, 13079; see
also ECF No. 363-10, PageID.9243, 9245, 9408.)
Things changed starting in January 2020. That month, MDOC changed its
computer system to the Corrections Offender Management System (COMS). (ECF
No. 363-7, PageID.9202; ECF No. 363-10, PageID.9239.) With this change, MDOC
began using the Current Dental Terminology codes published by the American Dental
Association. (ECF No. 363-10, PageID.9238.) As such, for the past three years, MDOC
has not used terms like “perio scale” and instead uses “Perio Scaling & Root Planing”
along with the corresponding CDT codes for scaling and root planing. (ECF No. 3791, PageID.14414.) Choi explains, COMS “prevent[s] . . . us [from] using the term[s]
interchangeably.” (ECF No. 374-9, PageID.13165.) And Defendants have produced
evidence that from January 2020 to October 2022—a period that includes a routinecare hiatus due to COVID-19—MDOC dental staff “completed” over 900 scalings and
root planings. (ECF No. 379-1, PageID.14368–14447.)
One other fact about how MDOC treats periodontitis: during an inmate’s first
two years of incarceration, he or she does not receive scaling and root planing for
periodontitis (unless, perhaps, it is part of an urgent-care appointment). See Policy
Directive 04.06.150 ¶ C (eff. May 1, 2018); Dental Services Manual at 4–5 (eff. Dec.
19, 2017). Maxwell, an intake and stabilization dentist, explains that if an inmate is
diagnosed with acute periodontitis at intake, he or she would not be referred to the
stabilization clinic for a scaling and root planing. (ECF No. 363-5, PageID.8989.)
Instead, that inmate would be referred to the stabilization clinic for a debridement.
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(ECF No. 363-5, PageID.8987, 9010.) Maxwell explains, “We refer for debridement
because a debridement will allow for the hygienist to remove the large deposits of
calculus that’s present. That is a contributing factor to his acute periodontal issue at
the point of exam.” (ECF No. 363-5, PageID.8988.) Lisa Stout, an MDOC hygienist
who has done a stint or two at the stabilization clinic, agrees that scalings and root
planings are not performed at the clinic because “the patient is not eligible for routine
treatment.” (ECF No. 374-7, PageID.12862.) She explains that when she performed
a debridement at the stabilization clinic she would just “knock[] off the big stuff” until
the inmate could later receive a scaling and root planing. (ECF No. 374-7,
PageID.12863.)
Caries
This case also involves a separate, progressive disease: caries. The Court again
takes a three-part approach: it will describe the nature of the disease, its treatment,
and its diagnosis.
What is Caries?
In lay terms, caries is a cavity. For dentists, caries is “an infectious disease
characterized by progressive destruction of tooth substance, beginning on the outer
(enamel) surface or the exposed root surface.” (ECF No. 384, PageID.15378.) An
“incipient” lesion is one that has only caused damage to the tooth’s enamel (a very
tough but thin shell of the tooth). (ECF No. 384, PageID.15379.) At this point, the
lesion “has the potential to re-mineralize, reversing the decay process.” (ECF No. 384,
PageID.15379.) As the decay deepens, it reaches the tooth’s dentin, a substance less
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resistant to decay than enamel. (ECF No. 384, PageID.15379.) According to Shulman,
once a cavity has reached the dentin, “the patient should be scheduled for treatment.”
(ECF No. 384, PageID.15379; ECF No. 366-6, PageID.10842 (Johnston similarly
testifying, “If I see caries that is getting halfway to the pulp, I’m going to want to do
[a comprehensive exam] as soon as possible.”).) If the caries lesion is allowed to
progress further, it will eventually reach the tooth’s pulp, i.e., the tooth’s nerve and
blood supply. (ECF No. 384, PageID.15379; ECF No. 366-6, PageID.10882.)
Untreated caries can cause pain, infection, tooth loss, and, in some cases, a systemic
infection. (ECF No. 384, PageID.15378.)
Like periodontitis, caries progression depends on an individual’s host factors.
These factors include diet and “dry mouth” caused by medications. (ECF No. 384,
PageID.15380.) Because there are several factors that affect the rate of caries
progression, it is not possible to state, as a general matter, how much time it would
take for a cavity in the enamel to reach the dentin or pulp. (ECF No. 384,
PageID.15430 (Shulman remarking that his “crystal ball is too cloudy to tell [him]
how many months it [would] take the asymptomatic decay in [an inmate’s tooth] to
become symptomatic”); see also ECF No. 384, PageID.15430 (noting that the process
“may take several years”); ECF No. 374-8, PageID.12936.)
How is Caries Treated?
Caries treatment depends on how far the lesion has extended into the tooth.
For caries in the enamel only, a fluoride treatment with continued monitoring
suffices. (ECF No. 374-8, PageID.12938.) If a cavity has reached the dentin, a filling
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is typical treatment. (See ECF No. 374-8, PageID.12938.) Although MDOC provides
fillings, they are not provided during an inmate’s first two years in prison unless the
cavity is urgent (but not so urgent to require extraction). (ECF No. 363-5,
PageID.9042, 9059; see also ECF No. 363-10, PageID.9340.) Once a cavity has reached
the pulp, a root canal is a common treatment. (ECF No. 384, PageID.15379.) But
MDOC does not provide root canals, so for an inmate, an extraction might be the only
remedy for a tooth with deep decay. See Policy Directive 04.06.150 ¶ N; (ECF No. 384,
PageID.15379 n.6).
How is Caries Diagnosed?
In terms of the tools for diagnosing caries, the experts in this case largely
agree.
According to Shulman, incipient lesions that have only attacked the enamel
can be difficult to identify because “too little tooth has been affected to be seen on a
radiograph.” (ECF No. 384, PageID.15379.) Once caries has reached the dentin, it
will still not be visible on a panoramic x-ray but can be diagnosed using a bitewing xray. (ECF No. 384, PageID.15401.) Further, says Shulman, when there is caries
between teeth (i.e., interproximal decay), bitewing x-rays are needed to see it. (ECF
No. 374-8, PageID.12935.) The exception is “very pronounced” interproximal caries—
that decay will show up on even a panoramic x-ray. (Id.; see also ECF No. 366-3,
PageID.9914 (Harrel).)
Defendants’ expert largely agrees. In Johnston’s opinion, a panoramic x-ray
will reveal “gross” interproximal caries, but “it’s much more difficult to see incipient
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caries on a panorex than on a bitewing.” (ECF No. 366-6, PageID.10785.) And
Johnston conceded that the “standard of care” requires a dentist to use bitewing xrays (or another type of intra-oral x-ray) to diagnose incipient, interproximal caries.
(ECF No. 366-6, PageID.10786.)
As discussed, MDOC dental staff do not take bitewing x-rays at intake but do
take them at the first complete exam.
Plaintiffs’ Challenges to MDOC’s Dental Care
Now to the legal issues at hand.
This case is almost nine years old. Recounting the entire procedural history is
not productive, but here are a few highlights. Plaintiffs filed this suit in 2014. In 2015,
this Court denied Plaintiffs’ first motion for class certification in part because it
believed that threshold issues “such as exhaustion and mootness” should be resolved
first. Johannes v. Washington, No. 14-CV-11691, 2015 WL 5634446, at *10 (E.D.
Mich. Sept. 25, 2015). In 2016, the Court addressed Defendants’ motion related to
exhaustion and mootness and dismissed some of the named plaintiffs’ claims. See
generally Johannes v. Washington, No. 14-11691, 2016 WL 1253266 (E.D. Mich. Mar.
31, 2016). The case was then stayed for six months so that Plaintiffs could exhaust
certain claims, and in late 2016, Plaintiffs filed a third amended complaint. (ECF No.
161, 168.) In 2018, following another motion by Defendants on the basis of exhaustion
and some discovery, Plaintiffs filed their fourth amended complaint. (ECF No. 236.)
Around this time, Plaintiffs also asked the Court to certify large classes consisting of
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thousands, if not tens-of-thousands, of inmates in the custody of MDOC. See (ECF
No. 242); Dearduff v. Washington, 330 F.R.D. 452, 456 (E.D. Mich. 2019).
The Court declined to certify some of the large classes Plaintiffs proposed. As
the Court explained, in a group of thousands of inmates, the dental-health diversity
is great. See Dearduff v. Washington, 330 F.R.D. 452, 466–67 (E.D. Mich. 2019).
Imagine Jessica, who has never smoked, is not diabetic, is generally very healthy,
and is fastidious about oral hygiene. Now imagine Michael, who is diabetic, has
smoked for many years, is generally not very healthy, and has very poor oral hygiene.
Suppose that at intake, Jessica is diagnosed with Stage I periodontitis, “the
borderland between gingivitis and periodontitis” (ECF No. 384, PageID.15387),
whereas Michael is diagnosed with Stage II, i.e., “established” periodontitis. If both
Jessica and Michael go two-and-half years without scaling and root planing, there is
at least a fair, and perhaps a very good chance that Jessica’s periodontitis will not
advance to a serious medical need, but just the opposite is true of Michael’s
periodontitis. (See ECF No. 366-6, PageID.10772 (Johnston discussing host factors).)
So in a group of thousands of inmates, individualized inquiries abounded, meaning
that the Court could not decide an issue central to each inmate’s Eighth Amendment
claim in “one stroke.” See Dearduff v. Washington, 330 F.R.D. 452, 456, 467 (E.D.
Mich. 2019) (citing Wal-Mart Stores, Inc. v. Dukes, 564 U.S. 338, 350 (2011)).
But the Court did find that smaller classes with less dental-health diversity
satisfied Rule 23’s requirements for certification. And, ultimately, the Court certified
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five classes. Bownes v. Washington, No. 14-CV-11691, 2021 WL 3700867, at *11 (E.D.
Mich. Aug. 20, 2021).
Class IIA consists of inmates who have caries that reached the dentin or early,
moderate, or advanced periodontitis. Bownes, 2021 WL 3700867, at *11. The
members of this class claim that MDOC’s failure to use intraoral x-rays at intake and
failure to conduct periodontal probing at any point during their incarceration violates
the Eighth Amendment’s prohibition on cruel and unusual punishment. See id.
Class IIB consists of inmates who have healthy gums or gingivitis. Bownes,
2021 WL 3700867, at *11. The claims of this class will be clarified below but, for now,
it suffices to say that these inmates claim that MDOC’s failure to conduct probing
and charting, and failure to provide certain dental cleanings, violates the Eighth
Amendment.
Class IIC consists of inmates who have periodontitis but have not received all
necessary scaling and root planing and follow-up treatment. See Bownes, 2021 WL
3700867, at *11. These inmates claim that MDOC’s failure to provide them with
scaling and root planing and the associated follow-up care violates the Eighth
Amendment. See id.
The Court also certified two other classes. The members of Class III claim that
MDOC does not provide dentures in a timely manner. See Bownes, 2021 WL 3700867,
at *11. The members of Class IVB claimed that MDOC does not provide urgent care
in a timely manner; by stipulation of the parties, the members of Class IVB agreed
to dismiss their claim. (ECF No. 346, PageID.8486.)
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Both sides now seek summary judgment.
Legal Standards
Cross-Motions for Summary Judgment
When, as here, both sides seek summary judgment, the Court considers each
motion separately, and it is not necessarily the case that either party is entitled to
summary judgment. See Ohio State Univ. v. Redbubble, Inc., 989 F.3d 435, 442 (6th
Cir. 2021). When considering Plaintiffs’ motion, the evidence is viewed in the light
most favorable to Defendants and the initial (and ultimate) burden is on Plaintiffs to
show that it is entitled to judgment as a matter of law. See id. The opposite is true
when considering Defendants’ motion. See id.
Eighth Amendment Standards
The Eighth Amendment to the U.S. Constitution prohibits “cruel and unusual
punishments.” And a prison official subjects an inmate to cruel and unusual
punishment if he is (1) deliberately indifferent to (2) a substantial risk that the
inmate will suffer (3) serious harm. Farmer v. Brennan, 511 U.S. 825, 837 (1994).
To expand on the third element first, not all the hardships of prison amount to
serious harm. Farmer, 511 U.S. at 834. In the context of medical—or dental—care,
an inmate generally establishes sufficiently serious harm in one of two ways. See
Phillips v. Tangilag, 14 F.4th 524, 534 (6th Cir. 2021). He might show that his
medical need “is one that has been diagnosed by a physician as mandating
treatment.” Mattox v. Edelman, 851 F.3d 583, 598 (6th Cir. 2017). Or he can show
that his medical need was “so obvious that even a layperson would easily recognize
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the necessity for a doctor’s attention.” Id. Either way, the harm is serious enough to
trigger Eighth Amendment protection.
What about “substantial risk”? Inmates need not wait until serious harm
befalls them before coming to court. In Helling v. McKinney, the plaintiff’s cellmate
smoked five packs of cigarettes a day. 509 U.S. 25, 28 (1993). Prison officials argued
that to establish an Eighth Amendment claim, the plaintiff needed to show that he
was “currently suffering serious medical problems” from the second-hand smoke. Id.
at 32. The Supreme Court was not persuaded: “We have great difficulty agreeing that
prison authorities . . . may ignore a condition of confinement that is sure or very likely
to cause serious illness and needless suffering the next week or month or year.” Id.
at 33. Thus, “subjecting individuals to a risk of future harm—not simply actually
inflicting pain—can qualify as cruel and unusual punishment.” Baze v. Rees, 553 U.S.
35, 49 (2008). But “[t]o establish that such exposure violates the Eighth Amendment,”
the risk must be “substantial,” i.e., “very likely to cause serious illness and needless
suffering, and give rise to ‘sufficiently imminent dangers.’” Id. (quoting Helling, 509
U.S. at 33, 34–35).
That leaves the subjective prong of an Eighth Amendment claim. Under the
deliberate-indifference standard, it is not enough that a reasonable prison official in
the defendant’s position would have appreciated that the plaintiff was at a
substantial risk of serious harm. Instead, the defendant, personally, must have
appreciated that the plaintiff was at a substantial risk of serious harm, yet, despite
that understanding, failed to alleviate the risk. Farmer v. Brennan, 511 U.S. 825, 837
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(1994) (“[T]he official must both be aware of facts from which the inference could be
drawn that a substantial risk of serious harm exists, and he must also draw the
inference.”).
Courts have tailored this deliberate-indifference test for claims based on
inadequate medical care. If a doctor (or dentist or hygienist) did nothing more than
fail to provide the treatment that an ordinary doctor would have, that negligent care
does not establish deliberate indifference. Rhinehart v. Scutt, 894 F.3d 721, 738 (6th
Cir. 2018); see also Rouster v. Cnty. of Saginaw, 749 F.3d 437, 447 (6th Cir. 2014)
(“When a prison doctor provides treatment, albeit carelessly or inefficaciously, to a
prisoner, he has not displayed a deliberate indifference to the prisoner’s needs, but
merely a degree of incompetence which does not rise to the level of a constitutional
violation.” (internal quotation marks omitted)).
That said, too many deviations below the mean can amount to deliberate
indifference. See Richmond v. Huq, 885 F.3d 928, 940 (6th Cir. 2018) (“It is
insufficient for a doctor caring for inmates to simply provide some treatment for the
inmates’ medical needs.”); Griffith v. Franklin Cnty., Kentucky, 975 F.3d 554, 568 (6th
Cir. 2020). Thus, where a doctor provides treatment, but that treatment is “so grossly
incompetent[] [or] inadequate” that it shocks the conscience, the doctor has acted with
deliberate indifference. See Rhinehart v. Scutt, 894 F.3d 721, 737 (6th Cir. 2018). Or
to make the point less abstractly: if a prisoner has a severed finger, “take two and
call me in the morning” will not do. Cf. Murray v. Dep’t of Corr., 29 F.4th 779, 788
(6th Cir. 2022).
25
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Facial Challenge to the Two-Year Rule
The Court begins with Bownes’ facial challenge to the two-year rule. Although
Defendants have not made a specific request for summary-judgment on this claim,
they have asked the Court to dismiss the entire case. (See ECF No. 363,
PageID.8795.) Further, because Bownes sought summary judgment on his challenge
to the two-year rule, the issue has been fully briefed. (See ECF No. 366, PageID.9844–
9850; ECF No. 369, PageID.11868–11876.) So the Court will proceed as if both sides
had moved for summary judgment on this claim.
The Two-Year Rule, Standing
Oddly, Bownes raised the issue of his standing to bring a facial challenge to
the two-year rule, which, apparently, prompted Defendants to argue that he lacks
standing. (ECF No. 366, PageID.9843; ECF No. 369, PageID.11872.) As Article III
standing implicates this Court’s subject-matter jurisdiction, the Court must not only
address the issue, but it must do so before getting to the merits. See In re Flint Water
Cases, 53 F.4th 176, 188 (6th Cir. 2022).
Bownes has the burden of proving his standing to challenge the two-year rule.
See Buchholz v. Meyer Njus Tanick, PA, 946 F.3d 855, 860 (6th Cir. 2020). To carry
his burden at the summary-judgment stage, he must show that a reasonable
factfinder could conclude that he “(1) suffered an injury in fact, (2) that is fairly
traceable to the challenged conduct of the defendant[s], and (3) that is likely to be
redressed by a favorable judicial decision.” Id. (internal quotation marks omitted).
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Although Defendants say Bownes cannot meet any of these three elements, the
Court homes in on their assertion that the Court cannot redress Bownes’ injury from
the two-year rule by granting an injunction. This is true. Bownes has now served
enough time that he is no longer subject to the two-year rule.
But this is more of a mootness argument than a standing one. After all, when
Bownes joined this suit, he was still subject to the two-year rule and, at that time, an
injunction would have provided Bownes a few months of relief. (Compare ECF No.
236, PageID.6263 (fourth amended complaint filed in January 2018), with ECF No.
384, PageID.15466 (indicating that Bownes completed two years in April 2018).)
But whether addressed under standing or mootness the essential point is the
same: Bownes is no longer subject to the two-year rule. And he seeks only forwardlooking, injunctive relief. So his request for relief is moot.
True, there is a capable-of-repetition-yet-evading-review exception to
mootness. And true, the evading-review requirement appears to be satisfied here: any
inmate who challenges the two-year rule is likely to serve two years before the
challenge can be fully litigated. See In re Flint Water Cases, 53 F.4th 176, 189 (6th
Cir. 2022) (noting that Supreme Court has found two years “too short to obtain
complete review”).
But Bownes cannot satisfy the capable-of-repetition part of the exception.
First, he does not try. Next, to satisfy that requirement, generally “the named
plaintiff” must make “a reasonable showing that he will again be subjected to the
alleged illegality.” Flint Water, 53 F.4th at 189 (emphasis added) (internal quotation
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marks omitted); see also Chirco v. Gateway Oaks, L.L.C., 384 F.3d 307, 309 (6th Cir.
2004) (providing that exception applies where there is “a reasonable expectation that
the same complaining party would be subjected to the same action again” (emphasis
added)). Here, the only way for Bownes to be again subject to the two-year rule is if
he is reincarcerated following release. Bownes’ earliest release date is in 2026—but
his latest is in 2038. Michigan Offender Tracking Information System, Melvin
Bownes, https://perma.cc/B9MW-5YSV. That alone makes it somewhat doubtful that
Bownes will again face the two-year rule. But even if Bownes is released relatively
soon, he would have to be convicted of another crime or parole violation. This Court
will not lightly infer recidivism. Cf. O’Shea v. Littleton, 414 U.S. 488, 497 (1974) (“[I]t
seems to us that attempting to anticipate whether and when these respondents will
be charged with crime and will be made to appear before either petitioner takes us
into the area of speculation and conjecture.”).
In short, the Court finds that Bownes’ facial challenge to the two-year rule is
moot, and thus, the Court lacks subject-matter jurisdiction over that claim. See
Libertarian Party of Ohio v. Blackwell, 462 F.3d 579, 584 (6th Cir. 2006) (“[A] federal
court has a continuing duty to ensure that it adjudicates only genuine disputes
between adverse parties. . . . The mootness inquiry must be made at every stage of a
case.”).
The Two-Year Rule, Merits
Supposing that Bownes’ facial challenge is not moot, the claim would fare no
better on the merits.
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In fact, Bownes’ argument starts off on entirely the wrong track. He says—and
Defendants agreed—that a facial challenge to a prison regulation should be analyzed
under Turner v. Safley, 482 U.S. 78 (1987). (ECF No. 366, PageID.9844; ECF No. 369,
PageID.11868.) And so, says Bownes, the question is whether the two-year rule is
backed by a legitimate penological interest. (ECF No. 366, PageID.9850.)
But Turner alleged that prison regulations violated the First Amendment and
the Fourteenth Amendment, 482 U.S. at 82, 93–94; in contrast, Bownes says the twoyear rule violates the Eighth Amendment. The difference matters. “Although the
Supreme Court has stated broadly that the standard of review [it] adopted in Turner
applies to all circumstances in which the needs of prison administration implicate
constitutional rights, Turner has been applied only where the constitutional right is
one which is enjoyed by all persons, but the exercise of which may necessarily be
limited due to the unique circumstances of imprisonment.” Jordan v. Gardner, 986
F.2d 1521, 1530 (9th Cir. 1993) (internal quotation marks and citation omitted). Yet
“Eighth Amendment rights do not conflict with incarceration; rather, they limit the
hardships which may be inflicted upon the incarcerated as ‘punishment.’” Id. Thus,
“the Turner analysis does not apply to Eighth Amendment claims.” Linderman v.
Vail, 59 F. App’x 180, 182 (9th Cir. 2003).
Indeed, it would be odd that in analyzing an as-applied claim based on the
Eighth Amendment, the question is whether the defendant was deliberately
indifferent to a substantial risk of serious harm but that in analyzing a facial claim
based on the same text, the question changes to whether there is a legitimate
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penological interest for the prison’s rule. See Bucklew v. Precythe, — U.S. —,139 S.
Ct. 1112, 1127–28 (2019) (explaining, in the context of addressing a facial challenge
based on the Eighth Amendment, that the type of challenge “does not speak at all to
the substantive rule of law necessary to establish a constitutional violation”).
So, under the proper standard, Bownes would need to show that MDOC’s twoyear rule violates the Eighth Amendment in all its applications. See United States v.
Salerno, 481 U.S. 739, 745 (1987) (“A facial challenge to a legislative Act is, of course,
the most difficult challenge to mount successfully, since the challenger must establish
that no set of circumstances exists under which the Act would be valid.”); Payne v.
Sevier Cnty., Tennessee, 681 F. App’x 443, 447 (6th Cir. 2017) (applying Salerno to
county policy of permitting nurses to diagnose detainees); City of Los Angeles, Calif.
v. Patel, 576 U.S. 409, 415 (2015) (applying Salerno to city code).
The Court is hard pressed to see how Bownes could make such a showing.
Given the many thousands of inmates subject to the two-year rule, surely there are a
significant number who have no or only very minor dental problems and whose host
factors favor very slow progression. While these “dentally fit” inmates might still
prefer treatment like a cleaning or a filling, Bownes has not shown that they are at
“substantial” risk of “serious” harm during their two- or three-year wait for routine
care. In fact, in the context of addressing Class IIB’s claims below, the Court reaches
a very similar conclusion.
Accordingly, even if Bownes’ challenge to the two-year rule were not moot, it
would almost certainly fail on the merits.
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Periodontitis Treatment Claim (Class IIC)
By definition, all members of Class IIC have some stage of periodontitis. As
such, each member potentially requires a scaling and root planing or, at least,
periodontitis maintenance. Yet, according to the members of Class IIC, MDOC does
not provide scaling and root planing or the associated follow-up care. Accordingly, in
their view, Defendants are deliberately indifferent to their periodontitis. And because
they believe that untreated periodontitis is serious harm or at least places them at a
substantial risk of serious harm, they claim that MDOC’s failure to provide them
with scaling and root planing and the associated follow-up care violates their Eighth
Amendment rights
Class IIC, Deliberate Indifference
The Court begins with the subjective prong: are Defendants deliberately
indifferent to its inmates’ periodontitis?
The members of Class IIC believe the answer is “yes” and direct the Court to
their experts’ opinions. As noted, Shulman reviewed the dental records of 100 MDOC
inmates and found that 61 of those were diagnosed with periodontitis at a complete
or periodic exam. (ECF No. 315-11, PageID.8020.) Yet, says Shulman, the treatment
plans for those inmates never included scaling and root planing; instead, MDOC
dentists would prescribe a “prophy.” (ECF No. 315-11, PageID.8020.) Or in his words:
“Treatment plans for prisoners assessed with periodontal disease rarely include
periodontal treatment other than oral prophylaxis . . . . [A]nd while a dentist may
treatment plan a patient for a prophy (and not prescribe scaling and root planing),
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my record review shows that dental hygienists often perform ‘periodontal scale’ sua
sponte.” (ECF No. 384, PageID.15377.) But Shulman also concedes, “In my chart
reviews, I often could not tell for certain from the clinical narrative, what periodontal
procedure was performed.” (ECF No. 384, PageID.15428, 15470.) Harrel, also one of
Plaintiffs’ experts, similarly opines, “The term ‘perio scaling’ as it appears in some
MDOC dental records is not routinely used in dentistry and is not contained in the
CDT. Perio scaling does not accurately describe [scaling and root planing].” (ECF No.
366-2, PageID.9867.) Harrel further says, “[the periodontal therapy provided by
MDOC] is either inadequate or undocumented because the documentation does not
tell me what was done. . . . I don’t know what perio scale is because that is not a
recognized form of documentation. Did they do root planing? They didn’t say.” (ECF
No. 366-3, PageID.9961; see also ECF No. 366-2, PageID.9873.)
As this Court understands it, Shulman and Harrel essentially opine that
MDOC dentists either (1) do not prescribe scaling and root planing to inmates with
periodontitis (but sometimes hygienists perform that procedure anyway) or (2)
prescribe scaling and root planing but improperly document that procedure as “perio
scale” or “prophy” or “debridement.”
In their reply brief, Defendants essentially take the position that Plaintiffs’
evidence is stale. (See ECF No. 379, PageID.13884.) As noted, beginning in 2020,
MDOC started using the Corrections Offender Management System (COMS). And
with this change, MDOC dental staff began using the terminology and codes that are
used in private practice, namely the Current Dental Terminology codes. And as part
32
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of their reply brief, Defendants produced the results of a query of the COMS database.
The query results show that from January 2020 to October 2022, MDOC hygienists
(and sometimes dentists) have “completed” over 900 scalings and root planings. (ECF
No. 379-1, PageID.14368–14447.)
This new evidence substantially undermines Class IIC’s claim of indifference.
Dental records from before MDOC implemented COMS are the foundation of their
argument. According to Plaintiffs’ experts, those records rarely (if ever) used the term
“scaling and root planing.” And so Plaintiffs’ experts inferred that either MDOC was
not providing that treatment or, at minimum, MDOC’s documentation was
substandard. Indeed, Plaintiffs concede that they “relied on the prior dental record
system.” (ECF No. 380-2, PageID.14598.) Thus, COMS introduced a crack in the
foundation of Plaintiffs’ theory: MDOC’s dental records now use CDT terminology
and codes, including the codes for scaling and root planing, and the dental records
now expressly state, “D4341 Perio Scaling & Root Planing.” (See e.g., ECF No. 379-1,
PageID.14375.)
Unfortunately for Defendants, while ultimately the COMS data (with some
additional supplementation) will likely win the day for them, it does not win the day
for them at the summary-judgment stage. To appreciate why, a bit of procedural
history is in order.
In their opening summary-judgment brief, Defendants asserted, “MDOC
continues to treat periodontal diseases through providing oral hygiene instruction,
prophylaxis[,] scaling and root planing, and providing extractions when necessary.”
33
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(ECF No. 363, PageID.8838.) Yet that statement was not backed by a citation to the
record. (See id.) True, Defendants did cite evidence of “thousands of hygiene
appointments” (id. at PageID.8836), but they did not cite evidence of scaling and root
planing, specifically. Plaintiffs caught this, and asserted in their response brief,
“Defendants offer no citation to depositions, dental records or manual to support its
claim that MDOC provides scaling and root planing.” (ECF No. 374, PageID.12748.)
That prompted Defendants to attach the COMS data to their reply brief.
And that spawned additional motion practice. (ECF Nos. 380, 381, 383.) To
spare the details, Plaintiffs essentially say that Defendants have impermissibly
introduced new evidence for the first time in a reply brief (ECF No. 380-2,
PageID.14598) and, in any event, this evidence should have been handed over in
discovery but was not (ECF No. 380-2, PageID.14602–14603; ECF No. 383,
PageID.14665–14666). Plaintiffs thus ask the Court to disregard the COMS data.
(ECF No. 380-2, PageID.14597, 14606.)
The Court agrees with Plaintiffs that Defendants should not be able to use the
COMS data to prevail at the summary-judgment stage. To start, other than a
reference to a declaration attaching a spreadsheet that identifies COMS data,
Defendants did not discuss the COMS data, and in particular the number of recent
scalings and root planings, in their opening brief. Sure, a defendant seeking summary
judgment usually does not have to produce evidence to discharge its initial burden; it
usually only has to show that the plaintiff lacks evidence supporting his or her claim.
But here, Defendants opted to affirmatively argue that they provided treatment for
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periodontitis. So they probably should have directed Plaintiffs to the backup for that
argument. See Mirando v. U.S. Dep’t of Treasury, 766 F.3d 540, 548 (6th Cir. 2014)
(“When new submissions and/or arguments are included in a reply brief, and a
nonmovant’s ability to respond to the new evidence has been vitiated, a problem
arises with respect to Federal Rule of Civil Procedure 56(c).” (internal quotation
marks omitted)).
More troubling is the fact that Defendants did not produce the COMS data (or
something similar) during the very lengthy discovery period. True, as Defendants
say, the switch to COMS was mentioned during many depositions. Indeed, during his
deposition, Choi explained, “[W]e used to use terms ‘perio scaling,’ ‘prophy,’ and
‘scaling and root planing’ interchangeably. . . . Now with the new system, . . . we are
following the CDT code. . . . Now with the new system we do not have such a term
like ‘perio scale.’” (ECF No. 374-9, PageID.13079–13080.) That testimony should have
tipped Plaintiffs off: after January 2020, MDOC’s dental records would have included
the CDT code for scaling and root planing if the procedure had been performed. Yet,
as far as the Court can tell, Plaintiffs never specifically asked Defendants for a log
showing how many times the “scaling and root planing” code had been used. In other
words, Plaintiffs did not adapt their case, which seeks forward-looking relief, to the
current MDOC practice. On the other hand, the COMS data may ultimately allow
Defendants to prevail on one of the central claims in this case; so Defendants should
have supplemented their initial disclosures with those results (or like data). See Fed.
R. Civ. P. 26(a)(1)(A) (requiring the initial disclosure of information a party may use
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“to support its . . . defenses”); Fed. R. Civ. P. 26(e)(1) (requiring supplementation of
initial disclosures).
In sum, because the COMS data was attached to Defendants’ reply brief, and
because Defendants did not produce the COMS data during discovery, the Court will
not consider that data in deciding whether Defendants are entitled to summary
judgment.
The question remains, though, have Defendants shown that every reasonable
factfinder would conclude that they are not indifferent to periodontitis? Without the
COMS data, the answer is “no.” Defendants’ opening brief only relied on “thousands
of hygiene appointments annually,” yet those are not necessarily scalings and root
planings. (See ECF No. 363, PageID.8836.) And it was reasonable for Shulman and
Harrel to infer that because the term “scaling and root planing” was not in the dental
records they reviewed, MDOC might not be consistently providing that treatment.
True, the dental records did include the terms “prophy” or “perio scale,” and Choi did
testify that prior to COMS, MDOC dental staff used “prophylaxis,” “debridement,”
and “perio scale” interchangeably and that each term could include a scaling and root
planing. (ECF No. 374-9, PageID.13074, 13079.) But Shulman also opined that he
rarely saw local anesthesia prescribed in connection with prophylaxis or “perio scale”
and that local anesthesia would typically be provided for a scaling and root planing.
(ECF No. 384, PageID.15470.) Accordingly, absent the COMS data, a reasonable
factfinder could conclude that MDOC dental staff was not consistently providing
scaling and root planing to inmates with periodontitis. See Williams v. Sutley, No.
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120302, 2014 WL 12967583, at *6 (C.D. Cal. Mar. 6, 2014) (finding, where inmate
was repeatedly provided scalings for his periodontitis, there was a genuine dispute
as to whether inmate was provided root planing, and thus, a genuine dispute as to
whether dentist was indifferent to inmate’s periodontitis (emphases added)), report
and recommendation adopted, 2014 WL 12967604 (C.D. Cal. Apr. 1, 2014).
In advocating for a different result, Defendants cite several cases where courts
found that, as a matter of law, the defendant was not deliberately indifferent to the
plaintiff’s periodontal disease.
None of these authorities are binding, and all addressed a different claim than
the one Class IIC pursues. The members of Class IIC claim that scaling and root
planing is necessary to treat their periodontitis, and yet, Defendants are not ensuring
that MDOC dental staff provide that necessary treatment; therefore, say these
inmates, Defendants are indifferent to their periodontitis. Not one of the cases cited
by Defendants addresses a similar claim. Instead, they largely address a dentist’s use
of medications or extractions to treat pain and infection caused by periodontal
disease. See Sands v. Cheesman, 339 F. App’x 891, 893, 895 (11th Cir. 2009) (finding
that dentist’s treatment of “severe and at times acute persistent pain,” which was
ultimately associated with a periodontal abscess, did not amount to indifference
where there was “no evidence” that dentist should have anticipated that plaintiff
would develop an abscess); Coward v. Clarke, No. 7:20CV00702, 2022 WL 1018407,
at *4–5, 10 (W.D. Va. Apr. 5, 2022) (finding dentist not indifferent where plaintiff
made several complaints of pain associated with periodontal disease but dentist
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“promptly examined [the plaintiff] and provided treatment (pain medication and
antibiotics) the same day or the following day”); Burke v. Illinois Dep’t of Corr., No.
05 1059, 2006 WL 2850475, at *3–4, 9 (C.D. Ill. Oct. 2, 2006) (finding dentist not
indifferent to inmate’s tooth pain and infection from periodontal disease where
dentist prescribed pain killers and antibiotics and ultimately recommended
extraction). None of these cases addressed a claim of indifference to periodontitis
because dentists did not prescribe scaling and root planning and the associated
follow-up care.
Williamson v. Correctional Medical Services, another case cited by Defendants,
is a bit closer to the mark. The plaintiff there sought an “order requiring CMS to
provide standard dental treatment for periodontal disease” and asserted that “CMS
refuses to treat active perio-infections and, when it did provide teeth cleaning, the
process was substandard.” Williamson v. Corr. Med. Servs., No. CIVA 06-379-SLR,
2007 WL 2698256, at *2 (D. Del. Sept. 11, 2007). Perhaps the plaintiff’s request for
the “standard dental treatment for periodontal disease” includes a request for scaling
and root planing. Still, Williamson does not discuss scaling and root planing
specifically, and the evidentiary record in Williamson did not include multiple experts
opining that scaling and root planing is necessary treatment for periodontitis.
In short, Defendants’ authorities are not persuasive given the evidentiary
record in this case.
Before turning to the objective prong, the Court addresses two loose ends
regarding the subjective prong. Recall that Class IIC consists of all inmates with
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early, moderate, or advanced periodontitis or, simply, all inmates with periodontitis.
That condition unites the members of Class IIC. But the two-year rule divides them.
In fact, the Eighth Amendment claim of those still under the two-year rule differs in
two significant ways from the Eighth Amendment claim of those who have served two
years.
First, unlike those who have served two years, it appears that there is no
dispute that those who are subject to the two-year rule do not receive scaling and root
planing (unless it is part of urgent care). As discussed, MDOC’s Dental Policy
Directive and Dental Services Manual classify “periodontal” procedures as “routine”
dental care. That means that as a matter of written policy, those who have
periodontitis but have not served two years do not receive scaling and root planing.
And, as noted, practice bears this out. Maxwell, an intake dentist, states that inmates
diagnosed with active periodontitis at intake are not referred to the stabilization
clinic for scaling and root planing. (ECF No. 363-5, PageID.8987, 8989.) And Stout, a
hygienist who has done stints at the stabilization clinic, states that she only performs
debridements there, not scalings and root planings. (ECF No. 374-7, PageID.12862.)
Second, for members of Class IIC who are still under the two-year rule, the
evidence of deliberate indifference differs.
In April 2018, Choi, MDOC’s Dental Director, authored a memo to four dental
supervisors about treating periodontitis. (ECF No. 363-10, PageID.9504–9505.) Choi
wrote, “Based on the experience and research of the dentists on the [Dental Advisory
Board] and the presentation to [the Board] from Dr. Jeff Johnston, . . . it was
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acknowledged that periodontitis is generally a slowly developing immune response
condition[.]” (ECF No. 363-10, PageID.9504.) (Yes, the same Johnston that now
serves as Defendants’ expert in this case.) Choi’s memo continued, “The slow rate of
progression of periodontitis, when coupled with appropriate self-care, means that as
a practical matter, there is no harm done by not specifically treating, beyond selfcare, early stage periodontal conditions during the first two years of incarceration.”
(ECF No. 363-10, PageID.9504.) “Similarly,” Choi wrote, “moderate periodontitis, if
stable with self-care, will not require intervening dental care in the first two years of
incarceration to prevent the condition from becoming advanced.” (Id.) On the other
hand, “some moderate periodontitis conditions are not stable at the time of the
prisoner’s intake screening exam. . . . [U]nstable moderate periodontal condition
should be identified for stabilization care sufficient to attempt to change the condition
from unstable to stable.” (Id.) Finally, as to inmates with advanced periodontal
disease, Choi’s memo explained that these inmates “have experienced too much bone
loss to save the affected tooth or teeth” and recommended extraction “to reduce the
risk of infection and eliminate the source of the immune system provocation.” (Id.)
Choi’s memo goes a fair way toward showing that his (or the Dental Advisory
Board’s) decision not to treat periodontitis with scaling and root planing during an
inmate’s first two years of incarceration was not the result of indifference to
periodontitis. To the contrary, it appears to have been the result of reasoned, medical
judgment. To be sure, Plaintiffs’ experts strongly disagree that periodontitis is ever
stable. (ECF No. 366-2, PageID.9875; ECF No. 366-3, PageID.9966.) And even if
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Choi’s “stable moderate” category is valid, Plaintiffs’ experts argue that MDOC
dentists cannot accurately place inmates into that category given the lack of
periodontal probing and bitewing x-rays. (ECF No. 384, PageID.15419.) But all of
that sounds a lot like proof that Choi (or the Board) is falling short of the standard of
care for periodontitis, not that they are indifferent to the disease. Or stated
differently, while Choi and the Board’s approach to periodontitis may not be based on
sound dental science, the proper question is whether Choi and the Board, personally,
understand that their approach places inmates at substantial risk of serious harm
from periodontitis, yet, despite that understanding, choose to pursue it anyway. See
Farmer v. Brennan, 511 U.S. 825, 837 (1994).
That said, a final determination as to Choi’s indifference must be deferred to
trial. Defendants did not even mention Choi’s memo in their summary-judgment
motion. And had Defendants raised the memo, perhaps Plaintiffs could have argued
that Choi’s approach to periodontitis treatment during an inmate’s first two years of
incarceration is “so grossly incompetent[] [or] inadequate” that it shocks the
conscience. See Rhinehart v. Scutt, 894 F.3d 721, 737 (6th Cir. 2018). After all, Harrel
opines that it is “very unlikely” that moderate periodontitis is stable and that there
is no situation where it is acceptable to delay treatment of periodontitis for two years.
(ECF No. 366-3, PageID.9966, 9969.) And even Defendants’ expert, Johnston, states
that in his practice, he would never delay periodontitis treatment for two years. (ECF
No. 366-6, PageID.10702–10703.) Most persuasive, though, is that during his
deposition, Choi admitted that moderate periodontitis requires scaling and planing
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and even admitted that early periodontitis requires scaling and planing. (ECF No.
363-10, PageID.9281–9282.) In other words, Choi’s testimony is arguably contrary to
his memo. Accordingly, Choi’s memo does not warrant summary judgment.
The second loose end relates to the COMS data. While the Court will not
consider that evidence at this stage of the case, it makes sense to consider it at trial.
As Defendants correctly state, this case is about prospective, injunctive relief. (ECF
No. 379, PageID.13884.) So what matters is not whether MDOC dental staff failed to
provide or document scaling and root planing in the past. What matters is whether
they are doing so now and will continue to do so for the foreseeable future. After all,
the Court is not going to order MDOC to provide a treatment that it is already
providing. And the COMS data bears directly on whether MDOC is currently
providing scaling and root planing.
So the Court will permit Defendants to use the COMS data (and any similar
evidence that they produce to Plaintiffs) at the bench trial in this case. Until then,
the Court will have the parties engage in limited discovery on the extent that MDOC
is providing scaling and root planing and periodontitis maintenance to inmates with
periodontitis. As it stands, the COMS data shows 900 scalings and planings. But does
that cover 90% of the inmates who needed the procedure? Or only 30%? The former
indicates little indifference to periodontitis, the latter not so much. Accordingly, some
additional discovery is in order. The Court will detail the discovery process at the end
of this opinion.
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In sum, without the COMS data, Defendants have not shown that every
reasonable factfinder would conclude that they are not deliberately indifferent to
inmates’ periodontitis.
Class IIC, Substantial Risk of Serious Harm
Aside from arguing that they were not deliberately indifferent to Plaintiffs’
periodontitis, Defendants also argue that periodontal disease, by itself, is not a
serious medical need. They say that “the case law establishes a high standard”: “[o]nly
where periodontal disease presents with other symptoms and reaches an acute stage
does it constitute a serious medical condition.” (ECF No. 363, PageID.8830.) “On its
own,” they argue, “periodontal disease simply does not satisfy the Eighth Amendment
standard.” (Id.) The law is not so clear.
To be sure, there are cases that state, “periodontitis is not a serious medical
need.” Moore v. Parham, No. 1:16CV1519, 2017 WL 4118458, at *5 (E.D. Va. Mar. 23,
2017). Coward v. Clarke, No. 7:20CV00702, 2022 WL 1018407, at *2 (W.D. Va. Apr.
5, 2022) (“[A] diagnosis of periodontitis does not in itself create a serious medical
need[.]” (internal quotation marks omitted)).
But there are also cases saying that “periodontal disease or gingivitis . . . is a
serious medical condition which is manifested by the loss of teeth.” Board v.
Farnham, 394 F.3d 469, 483 n.7 (7th Cir. 2005); Rucano v. Koenigsmann, No. 9:12CV-00035, 2014 WL 1292281, at *10 (N.D.N.Y. Mar. 31, 2014) (“Defendants concede
that periodontal disease is a serious medical condition, and we agree.”).
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In this Court’s opinion, it all depends. Remember Jessica, the healthy,
fastidious-oral-hygiene inmate with very early periodontitis? If she does not receive
scaling and root planning for say, two-and-a-half years, she probably will only suffer
minimal alveolar bone and ligament loss. So she probably is not at a substantial risk
of serious harm during the two-and-a-half-year period. But what about Michael, the
unhealthy, poor-oral-hygiene inmate with moderate periodontitis? If he goes without
scaling and root planning for two-and-a-half years, his moderate periodontitis will
quite likely reach the advanced stage with the attendant risk of abscess or tooth loss.
So his periodontitis (coupled with the two-year rule) probably places him at a
substantial risk of serious harm. (See ECF No. 366-6, PageID.10803–10804; cf. ECF
No. 374-9, PageID.13158 (Choi agreeing that an inmate can go from normal gums to
moderate periodontitis in two years). Or to say all this another way, there are quite
likely some inmates with periodontitis that due to their individual or “host” factors,
have a good chance of avoiding the worst the disease has to offer. But others in Class
IIC will not be so fortunate. And virtually anyone who has experienced an abscess
knows it is a serious medical need. See also MDOC Dental Service Manual (eff. Dec.
19, 2017) (providing that “[t]ooth or soft tissue abscess with infection” qualifies for
“urgent” or “emergency” services); Coward v. Clarke, No. 7:20CV00702, 2022 WL
1018407, at *7 (W.D. Va. Apr. 5, 2022) (“[P]eriodontal inflammation around one or
more teeth that reaches an acute stage may be considered ‘a serious medical need.’”).
In any event, “if a plaintiff suffer[s] from a minor or non-obvious medical
condition, he can show that his condition was objectively serious ‘if it is ‘one that has
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been diagnosed by a physician as mandating treatment.’” Mattox v. Edelman, 851
F.3d 583, 598 (6th Cir. 2017). Here, Shulman, a dentist, has opined that periodontitis
requires treatment. (ECF No. 384, PageID.15384 (“Untreated, [periodontitis] could
progress, and the affected dentition may be lost.”); ECF No. 384, PageID.15425
(“[Scaling and root planing] is the standard of care for non-surgical treatment of
periodontal disease.”).) Even Choi admits that a patient with periodontitis requires
scaling and planing. (ECF No. 363-10, PageID.9281–9282.) And, by definition, the
members of Class IIC all have periodontitis. So under the would-a-doctor-mandatetreatment test, there is at least a genuine dispute over whether the members of Class
IIC have a serious medical need.
All that said, the Court agrees with Defendants to some extent. Quite likely
there are inmates in Class IIC who are not now experiencing serious harm and are
not even at a substantial risk of experiencing serious harm in the foreseeable future.
So the Court agrees with Defendants that a mere diagnosis of periodontitis does not,
by itself, establish a substantial risk of serious harm. The problem, though, is neither
party has attempted to draw a tenable dividing line between those whose
periodontitis does expose them to a substantial risk of serious harm and those whose
periodontitis does not. And because there are a significant number of people in Class
IIC who a reasonable factfinder could conclude are at a substantial risk of serious
harm, the Court sees no basis to grant summary judgment on Class IIC’s claims.
Indeed, neither party seeks partial summary judgment. And while Class IIC is
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perhaps not cohesive enough to meet Rule 23’s requirements, neither party has
sought to redefine the class, either.
In sum, a reasonable factfinder could conclude that a significant number of
people in Class IIC are at a substantial risk of serious harm. So summary judgment
is not warranted on the objective prong, either.
Class IIC, Representative’s Claims
In a similar vein, Defendants argue that Plaintiff Anthony Richardson, who
represents Class IIC, and Plaintiff Melvin Bownes who, along with Richardson,
represent Class IIA and Class IIB, “have failed to show that they have suffered from
a serious medical need.” (ECF No. 363, PageID.8833.) According to Defendants,
“While both Bownes and Richardson have been diagnosed with periodontal disease,
neither complains of pain related to their periodontal condition or any other side
effects or symptoms that would cause their condition to become serious.” (Id.)
Even if Defendants are correct that Bownes and Richardson have not actually
suffered serious harm attributable to their periodontal disease, a reasonable
factfinder could still conclude that MDOC’s treatment of their disease placed them at
a “substantial risk” of serious harm.
Start with Richardson. In spring 2017, he was diagnosed with “moderate”
periodontitis, and the calculus on his teeth was also “moderate.” (ECF No. 363-16,
PageID.9698.) Yet the dental record indicates that Richardson was only given a
“prophy” and that his teeth were “[s]caled and polished”; no local anesthesia is
indicated. (ECF No. 363-16, PageID.9698.) About 18 months later, in fall 2018,
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Richardson was diagnosed with “moderate advanced” periodontitis with “moderate
heavy” calculus. (ECF No. 363-16, PageID.9699.) Again, only a “prophy” was provided
and there is no indication that local anesthesia was used. (Id.) Those data points
support an inference that Richardson needed, but was not provided, scaling and root
planing. And while that certainly does not mean that Richardson suffered serious
harm, a reasonable factfinder could conclude that without scaling and root planing,
he was at a “substantial risk” of serious harm. See Flanory v. Bonn, 604 F.3d 249, 255
(6th Cir. 2010) (“In Helling, the Supreme Court explicitly rejected ‘petitioners’ central
thesis that only deliberate indifference to current serious health problems of inmates
is actionable under the Eighth Amendment.’”).
Now consider Bownes. At his intake exam, he was diagnosed with “moderate”
periodontitis with “heavy” calculus. (ECF No. 363-13, PageID.9628.) Yet Bownes was
not sent to the stabilization clinic. (See id.; ECF No. 363, PageID.8818.) Bownes did
end up receiving a scaling and root planing but given the two-year rule, not until twoand-half years after his intake diagnosis. (ECF No. 363-13, PageID.9635.) Although
Harrel concedes that “some people progress rapidly, some people progress slowly,” he
also opines that “if you have moderate [periodontitis], it’s going to progress almost
assuredly more quickly.” (ECF No. 366-3, PageID.9964.) Johnston, Defendants’
expert, similarly opines that in his practice, he would not let a patient with
periodontitis go untreated for two years. (ECF No. 366-6, PageID.10702–10703.)
Thus, a reasonable factfinder could conclude that toward the end of this two-and-halfyear period, Bownes was at “substantial risk” of his periodontitis advancing to the
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point of abscess or tooth loss. Accordingly, Defendants have not shown that, as a
matter of law, Bownes was not subjected to a substantial risk of serious harm.1
Periodontitis and Caries Diagnosis Claim (Class IIA)
Unlike Class IIC’s challenge to MDOC’s dental treatment, the members of
Class IIA challenge MDOC’s dental diagnoses. In particular, the members of Class
IIA, all of whom have periodontitis or caries that have reached the dentin, assert that
MDOC’s failure to conduct periodontal probing and charting at any point during their
incarceration, and MDOC’s failure to take bitewing x-rays during the intake exam,
violate the Eighth Amendment. Although the members of Class IIA believe that
probing, charting, and bitewing x-rays are necessary to establish a baseline so that
disease progression can be tracked over time, it appears that their primary concern
is that without those diagnostic tools, their disease is at a substantial risk of being
underdiagnosed. For instance, because MDOC does not perform periodontal probing,
an inmate with early periodontitis might be underdiagnosed with gingivitis. And, say
the members of Class IIA, underdiagnosis risks undertreatment.
In seeking summary judgment, Defendants have addressed the claims of Class
IIA, Class IIB, and Class IIC together. (See ECF No. 363, PageID.8826 (arguing that
prisoners in “Classes IIA–C” have not established an Eighth Amendment claim).) And
the Court has already addressed Class IIC’s claims. But, having studied the record,
The Court reiterates that Plaintiffs seek prospective relief, so to the extent
that Bownes and Richardson may have in the past been exposed to a substantial risk
of serious harm may not be a proper basis for seeking that relief. This was not
adequately addressed in the summary-judgment briefing and thus, the Court expects
that it will be addressed during trial.
1
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the Court believes that Class IIA’s claims materially differ from Class IIC’s claims
such that they should have been addressed separately. So the Court will do so below.
Class IIA, Substantial Risk of Serious Harm
First consider Defendants’ argument that periodontitis, in and of itself, is not
a serious medical need. (ECF No. 363, PageID.8827–8831.) Because Class IIA seeks
improved diagnostic techniques (as opposed to treatment), the proper question is
whether MDOC’s current method of diagnosing periodontitis and caries exposes the
members of Class IIA to a substantial risk of serious harm.
A simple thought experiment reveals the answer. Given the many thousands
of inmates in Class IIA, there must be hundreds who have (1) early periodontitis and
(2) host factors for rapid progression. For convenience, call one of these inmates
“Christopher.” The evidence suggests that at Christopher’s first complete exam,
MDOC dental staff will not perform periodontal probing. (See ECF No. 384,
PageID.15421; ECF No. 363-10, PageID.9326.) Yet Shulman and Harrel are adamant
that periodontitis cannot be accurately diagnosed without periodontal probing. (ECF
No. 374-8, PageID.12953 (Shulman); ECF No. 366-2, PageID.9859, 9923 (Harrel).)
Thus, a reasonable fact finder could conclude that there is a substantial risk that at
Christopher’s first complete exam, he will be diagnosed with merely gingivitis when,
in fact, he has early periodontitis. (See ECF No. 366-9, PageID.11461–11462 (MDOC
dentist Mark Cooks agreeing that without probing and bitewing x-rays, a patient
with early periodontitis might be diagnosed as having only gingivitis); ECF No. 384,
PageID.15376 (Shulman opining that the lack of probing “results in underdiagnosis
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of periodontal disease”); see also ECF No. 384, PageID.15385 (similar).) And if
Christopher is underdiagnosed with gingivitis, he will not be scheduled for a scaling
and root planing—that treatment is reserved for periodontitis. (See ECF No. 366-6,
PageID.10802.) This is especially problematic for Christopher given that he is one of
the members of Class IIA who has host factors favoring rapid progression. Thus, a
reasonable factfinder could conclude that before Christopher’s next annual exam,
there is a substantial risk that his periodontitis will progress from early periodontitis
to advanced periodontitis. (ECF No. 366-2, PageID.9872 (Harrel opining that “the
system wide lack of periodontal probing and charting in millimeters . . . is [a] practice
below the standard of care subjecting inmates to risk of serious harm, tooth
morbidity, and/or mortality”); ECF No. 366-3, PageID.9945 (similar).) Yet, if
Christopher had been properly diagnosed, his early periodontitis could have been
arrested before advancing.
A similar point can be made for members of Class IIA who have caries.
Shulman opines that “decay that has reached the dentin can be diagnosed using
bitewing x-rays while it is not visible on a panoramic x-ray.” (ECF No. 384,
PageID.15401.) And both Shulman and Harrel are adamant that a panoramic x-ray
will only pick up “very pronounced” interproximal caries (cavities between teeth).
(ECF No. 374-8, PageID.12935; ECF No. 366-3, PageID.9914.) And Johnston,
Defendants’ expert, agrees that interproximal caries will not show up on a panoramic
x-ray unless they are “gross.” (ECF No. 366-6, PageID.10785.) Yet, at intake, MDOC
only takes panoramic x-rays. (ECF No. 363-5, PageID.9158 (Maxwell), ECF No. 363-
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10, PageID.9324–9325.) Thus, a reasonable factfinder could conclude that at intake,
there is a substantial risk that many inmates’ moderate, interproximal caries will be
missed. Further, assuming that these inmates have host factors for rapid caries
progression—which, undoubtedly numerous people in Class IIA have—there is a
substantial risk that these inmates’ moderate, interproximal caries will advance to
the pulp before their first bitewing x-rays in two-plus years. And once caries reach
the pulp, abscess or tooth loss is likely, especially given that MDOC does not provide
root canals. (ECF No. 384, PageID.15379 (“When decay reaches the pulp, the tooth
will require either endodontic (root canal) treatment or extraction”).) Thus, a
reasonable factfinder could conclude that many in Class IIA with caries—for example,
those who have moderate, interproximal caries, who have factors for rapid
progression, and who are still under the two-year rule—are at a substantial risk of
serious harm due to MDOC’s failure to take bitewing x-rays at intake.
In fact, taking the evidence in the light most favorable to Plaintiffs, a
reasonable factfinder could conclude that this very thing happened to Bownes. A
review of Bownes’ electronic dental record indicates that at his intake exam, where
only a panoramic x-ray was used, he was not diagnosed with caries. (See ECF No.
363-13, PageID.9628.) Yet, at his first complete exam, which included bitewing xrays, he was diagnosed with “gross” interproximal caries. (ECF No. 363-13,
PageID.9632.) But by that point, the caries had progressed, and Bownes required a
tooth extraction. (See ECF No. 363-13, PageID.9632.) Take the facts in the light most
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favorable to Plaintiffs, a reasonable inference is that Bowens had caries at the time
of intake, but the panoramic x-ray did not reveal them, i.e., he was underdiagnosed.
In short, a reasonable factfinder could conclude that for numerous members of
Class IIA, MDOC’s failure to perform periodontal probing and charting at any point
during their incarceration, and MDOC’s failure to take bitewing x-rays during their
intake exam, exposes them to a substantial risk of serious harm.
That said, as with Class IIC, the Court agrees with Defendants that, quite
likely, there are members of Class IIA who are not at a substantial risk of serious
harm from MDOC’s diagnostic methods. But, again, none of the parties have
attempted to draw dividing lines. And, again, none of the parties have sought to
redefine Class IIA more narrowly. No party seeks partial summary judgment, either.
And given that there are likely hundreds of inmates in Class IIA who a reasonable
factfinder could conclude are at a substantial risk of serious harm from MDOC’s
diagnostic methods, the Court will not sua sponte revisit the Rule 23 requirements.
Class IIA, Deliberate Indifference
As to the other prong of an Eighth Amendment claim, Defendants invoke the
familiar line of cases where courts concluded that a plaintiff’s mere disagreement
with her medical provider’s treatment does not establish deliberate indifference. See
e.g., Rhinehart v. Scutt, 894 F.3d 721, 740 (6th Cir. 2018) (“An inmate’s disagreement
with the testing and treatment he has received . . . does not rise to the level of an
Eighth Amendment violation.”). Defendants point out that MDOC dentists use visual
inspection, oral-health history, and a panoramic x-ray to diagnose periodontitis and
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caries at intake. (ECF No. 363, PageID.8838.) Although Plaintiffs maintain that
probing and bitewing x-rays are needed to accurately diagnose periodontitis and
caries, in Defendants’ view, this is a mere disagreement with how MDOC diagnoses
those diseases. (See id.) And, say Defendants, an inmate’s mere disagreement with a
diagnostic method is not an Eighth Amendment claim. (See id.)
Although neither party has paid it enough attention, in this Court’s view,
Choi’s testimony is critical to answering the indifference question. Choi is MDOC’s
Dental Director, and between the two defendants, it is Choi who is much more
responsible for developing policies about probing, charting, and bitewing x-rays. (See
ECF No. 363-10, PageID.9253, 9255, 9435.)
So what did Choi say at his deposition? Choi explained that he has not
recommended that MDOC implement a policy of periodontal probing and charting
because he “d[id] not see the need” for it; in his view, “it is not . . . absolutely necessary
for [MDOC dental staff] to measure each pocket depth.” (ECF No. 363-10,
PageID.9293.) Choi further explained, “What we have been doing for our patient[s]
in terms of periodontal evaluation, just taking the x-ray, looking at the radiograph,
that is adequate method or ways of providing the service.” (ECF No. 363-10,
PageID.9294.) And when asked if inmates are at a substantial risk of harm because
intake dentists only perform a visual inspection and take a panoramic x-ray, Choi
responded, “[t]here is minimal harm.” (ECF No. 363-10, PageID.9322.) Indeed, Choi
“[did] not agree” that periodontal disease would be understated because the intake
dentists did not use probing and bitewing x-rays. (ECF No. 363-10, PageID.9336.)
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Choi even went so far as to say that it would not violate the standard of care in private
practice to assess a patient’s periodontal status without probing and bitewing x-rays.
(ECF No. 363-10, PageID.9297–9298.) In short, Choi believes that probing is not
necessary to assess periodontal disease. And it appears that Choi further believes
that bitewing x-rays are not necessary to assess periodontal disease.
That gets Defendants a long way towards summary judgment—at least on
Class IIA’s challenge to MDOC’s diagnosis of periodontitis (as opposed to caries). This
is not a dental-malpractice case. So proof that an objectively reasonable dentist would
probe and take bitewing x-rays to stage or diagnose periodontitis is not enough.
Estelle v. Gamble, 429 U.S. 97, 106 (1976) (“[A] complaint that a physician has been
negligent in diagnosing . . . a medical condition does not state a valid claim of medical
mistreatment under the Eighth Amendment. Medical malpractice does not become a
constitutional violation merely because the victim is a prisoner.”). What matters is
whether Choi, personally, appreciates that without probing or bitewing x-rays,
inmates are at a substantial risk of an improper periodontitis diagnosis and thus, are
at a substantial risk of their disease progressing to the point of serious harm. See
Farmer v. Brennan, 511 U.S. 825, 837 (1994). But Choi’s testimony indicates just the
opposite: he believes that visual inspection, oral-health history, and a panoramic xray suffice for a periodontal assessment. Indeed, Choi believes there is “minimal
harm” from assessing periodontitis that way.
That said, if a medical professional makes “a decision that represents such a
substantial departure from accepted professional judgment, practice, or standards,
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as to demonstrate that [he] actually did not base the decision on such a judgment,” it
is reasonable to infer deliberate indifference. Jackson v. Kotter, 541 F.3d 688, 697
(7th Cir. 2008). Thus, a medical professional’s treatment decisions will not be
accorded deference if “no minimally competent professional would have so responded
under those circumstances.” Id. at 698 (internal quotation marks omitted); see also
Griffith v. Franklin Cnty., Kentucky, 975 F.3d 554, 568 (6th Cir. 2020) (providing that
a prisoner might show deliberate indifference by establishing that his medical care
was “so woefully inadequate as to amount to no treatment at all”).
Here, a reasonable factfinder could conclude that Choi’s beliefs about MDOC’s
ability to assess particular cases of periodontitis deviates so far from the standard of
care, that it bespeaks of indifference to those cases.
Consider the evidence. According to Shulman, “periodontal probing has
been . . . the standard of care for ages, for 30 years as far as I can remember, maybe
longer, and it is beyond dispute that it is the standard of care. You cannot diagnose
periodontal disease without probing. . . . [P]robing is a sine qua non.” (ECF No. 3748, PageID.12953.) And Harrel similarly opines that there are no situations where
periodontitis could be accurately diagnosed without probing. (ECF No. 366-2,
PageID.9859; see also id. at PageID.9923.) Even Johnston, Defendants’ expert,
admits that the “minimum” diagnostic process involves probing. (ECF No. 366-6,
PageID.10680, 10765, 10784–10785 (testifying that the standard of care requires
probing).) And Mark Cooks, an MDOC dentist, believes that without probing and
bitewing x-rays, it is more likely than not that periodontitis will be understated. (ECF
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No. 366-9, PageID.11530.) Moreover, other departments of corrections, including the
Federal Bureau of Prisons and departments that have emerged from class actions,
perform some type of periodontal probing. (ECF No. 384, PageID.15382 & nn.19, 20,
PageID.15396.) Choi himself admits that in dental school, he was not taught that a
visual inspection and panoramic x-ray were all that was needed to assess periodontal
disease, and he further admits to probing and charting in his own private practice.
(ECF No. 363-10, PageID.9297, 9324–9325, 9444.)
Taking all this evidence together, a reasonable factfinder could conclude that
the universal standard, i.e., what even a half-decent dentist would do, is to perform
periodontal probing to diagnose periodontitis. As such, a reasonable factfinder could
conclude that any method of diagnosing periodontitis that does not involve probing is
such a deviation from the professional norm that the decision to use such a method
was not based on medical judgment but, instead, indifference.
True, for many cases of periodontitis (and caries), it is quite likely that visual
inspection, oral-health history, and panoramic x-ray are adequate for assessing the
disease or, at least, that approach would not expose inmates to a substantial risk of
serious harm. In fact, although it was unclear if he was referring to caries or
periodontitis, Johnston opines that “moderate to advanced cases requiring urgent
care can be easily recognized and diagnosed with panoramic images.” (ECF No. 3638, PageID.9220.) And so for many cases of periodontitis, Choi’s subjective belief that
MDOC is adequately assessing periodontitis is probably not “such a substantial
departure from accepted professional judgment, practice, or standards, as to
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demonstrate that [he] actually did not base the decision on such a judgment,” Jackson
v. Kotter, 541 F.3d 688, 697 (7th Cir. 2008).
But the Court is not yet convinced that Choi truly believes that MDOC’s
diagnostic methods are sufficient for some hard-to-diagnose cases of periodontitis or
caries. For instance, in the absence of probing, some early-stage periodontitis may be
diagnosed as gingivitis, resulting in the inmate not being prescribed scaling and root
planing. (See ECF No. 366-6, PageID.10800 (Johnston agreeing that a panoramic xray might not show bone loss associated with early periodontitis).) And, as discussed,
it appears to be undisputed that a panoramic x-ray will not reveal early or moderate
interproximal caries.
In all, while Choi’s testimony goes a long way toward establishing that
MDOC’s failure to use bitewing x-rays (at intake) and failure to perform periodontal
probing and charting (at any time) is not attributable to deliberate indifference to
periodontitis, the Court prefers a more complete record of Choi’s state of mind. In
particular, as the ultimate finder of fact in this case, the Court would like more
testimony on whether, for certain hard-to-diagnose cases of periodontitis and caries,
Choi appreciates that MDOC’s method of diagnosing the disease risks not identifying
its presence, and if he does, whether he further appreciates that a missed diagnosis
risks the disease advancing to the point of serious harm.
Class IIA, Representatives’ Claims
Here—although neither party has taken care to do so—Bownes’ and
Richardson’s individual claims of inadequate diagnosis must be analyzed separately
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from their individual claims of inadequate treatment (which the Court addressed
above). Class IIA’s claim is about diagnosis. Yet even without bitewing x-rays at
intake or periodontal probing, MDOC dentists were still able to diagnose Bownes’ and
Richardson’s periodontitis and caries. Thus, it might seem that no reasonable
factfinder could find for Bownes and Richardson on their claim that MDOC’s method
of diagnosing periodontitis and caries is constitutionally inadequate.
But, as discussed, Bownes’ electronic dental record indicates that he was not
diagnosed with caries at intake (where only a panoramic x-ray was taken), yet he was
diagnosed with “gross” interproximal caries at his first complete exam (where
bitewing x-rays were taken). (ECF No. 363-13, PageID.9628–9629, 9632.) And by the
time of Bownes’ complete exam, his tooth was beyond salvaging and required
extraction. (ECF No. 363-13, PageID.9632.) Thus, it is at least possible that MDOC’s
use of panoramic x-rays at intake exposed Bownes to a substantial risk of caries
progression. Yet Defendants have not addressed this possibility in their summaryjudgment motion.
As for Richardson, after a long history of periodontitis, he was diagnosed with
gingivitis in February 2019. (ECF No. 363-16, PageID.9700.) (It is unclear whether
the gingivitis diagnosis was because his periodontitis had been treated, whether
gingivitis was in a different area of the mouth, or whether some of the diagnoses were
incorrect.) It is at least possible that had probing been performed in February 2019,
Richardson’s gingivitis would have been more accurately diagnosed as periodontitis.
And if it had been, Richardson should have been scheduled for a scaling and root
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planing. So MDOC’s failure to perform periodontal probing in February 2019 may
have exposed Richardson to a substantial risk of serious harm. Defendants have not
addressed this possibility in their summary-judgment motion.
In short, absent an argument focused on Bownes’ and Richardson’s claims of
inadequate diagnosis, summary judgment on those claims is not warranted.
Class IIB’s Claims
Class Scope and Class Claims
Before addressing Class IIB’s claims, it helps to both clarify the scope of the
class and the members’ legal claims.
Class IIB, as originally defined by the Court, consisted of inmates with healthy
gums, gingivitis, early periodontitis, and stable moderate periodontitis. The Court
did not include inmates with more severe cases of periodontitis (unstable moderate
or advanced) in Class IIB because, given the evidence at the time, it appeared that
MDOC was treating those cases of periodontitis. See Dearduff v. Washington, 330
F.R.D. 452, 469 (E.D. Mich. 2019).
As the case wore on, Plaintiffs asked the Court to expand Class IIB to include
inmates with the more severe cases of periodontitis. And given Plaintiffs’ request and
the evidence they cited, the Court elected to both redefine Class IIB and to create a
new class, Class IIC. Class IIC consisted of inmates with early, moderate, or severe
periodontitis, or, more simply, with periodontitis, while Class IIB was modified to
include only inmates that did not have periodontitis, i.e., they had healthy gums or
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gingivitis. Bownes v. Washington, No. 14-CV-11691, 2021 WL 3700867, at *11 (E.D.
Mich. Aug. 20, 2021).
Some clarification of the scope of Class IIB and Class IIC is in order. On the
one hand, Class IIC could consist of inmates who MDOC has identified as having
periodontitis, with Class IIB consisting of inmates who MDOC has identified as
having gingivitis or healthy gums. On the other hand, Class IIC could consist of those
inmates who in fact have periodontitis, with Class IIB consisting of inmates who in
fact have gingivitis or healthy gums. The Court now clarifies that Class IIB and Class
IIC consist of the latter. This class definition is preferrable given Plaintiffs’ claims
that MDOC does not accurately diagnose periodontal disease.
Having clarified the scope of Class IIB, the Court turns to clarifying Class IIB’s
legal claims. When the Court redefined Class IIB, it articulated the legal claim as
follows: “Each [member of Class IIB] claims that he or she has a serious medical need
(e.g., a baseline measurement or gingivitis), and that MDOC’s policy of treating that
serious medical need (e.g., not obtaining a baseline measurement and not providing
a prophylaxis until two years in prison) amounts to deliberate indifference.” Bownes,
2021 WL 3700867, at *11. Although it was Plaintiffs’—not the Court’s—obligation to
clearly articulate the claims of the class, the bottom line is that the claims of Class
IIB should be stated clearly so that they can be properly adjudicated whether now or
at trial.
Based on the parties’ summary-judgment briefing and the expert reports, the
Court believes that the members of Class IIB intended to make two types of claims.
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The first claim is similar to Class IIC’s claim, a treatment claim. For those in
Class IIB who have healthy gums and are still under the two-year rule, they
apparently claim that not being provided a prophylaxis for two to three years violates
the Eighth Amendment. (Those who have served two years are eligible for a
prophylaxis on an annual basis, and the Court does not believe that any members of
Class IIB are claiming that waiting one year for a cleaning is a concern of the
Constitution.) For those in Class IIB who have gingivitis, they apparently claim that
they are not provided a treatment with CDT Code D4346, i.e., “the removal of plaque,
calculus and stains from supra-and-sub-gingival tooth surfaces when there is
generalized moderate or severe gingival inflammation in the absence of periodontitis.”
(ECF No. 366-2, PageID.9865 (emphasis added).) For these members, MDOC’s failure
to provide this D4346 scaling allegedly violates the Eighth Amendment.
The second type of claim is like Class IIA’s claim, a diagnosis claim.
Apparently, the members of Class IIB believe that they are entitled to periodontal
probing and charting at all their exams and bitewing x-rays at their intake exams.
Without these diagnostic tools, they believe they are at a substantial risk of serious
harm.
With the scope of the class and the legal claims clearly defined, the Court turns
to analyzing Class IIB’s claims. The Court begins with the claims brought by
members of Class IIB with gingivitis, and then turns to the like claims brought by
members of Class IIB with healthy gums.
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Class IIB, Members with Gingivitis
The claims brought by members of Class IIB with gingivitis can be divided into
a challenge to MDOC’s treatment for gingivitis and a challenge to MDOC’s diagnosis
of gingivitis. And those claims can be still further divided depending on whether the
inmate making the claim is still under the two-year rule. Again, the parties have
failed to address the issues at this level of granularity, but a proper Eighth
Amendment analysis demands it.
Treatment Claims
The Court begins by considering the treatment claims of members of Class IIB
who have gingivitis and who are still under the two-year rule. All experts in this case
agree that the proper treatment for gingivitis is good oral hygiene, smoking cessation,
and either a prophylaxis or a gingivitis-specific cleaning (D4346). (ECF No. 242-7,
PageID.6420 (Shulman); ECF No. 366-2, PageID.9865 (Harrel distinguishing
prophylaxis from D4346); ECF No. 366-6, PageID.10721 (Johnston).) And it is not
disputed that cleanings are “routine” procedures, meaning that MDOC inmates are
not even eligible for them until they have served two years in prison and do not
actually receive them until two-and-half or three years in prison. (ECF No. 384,
PageID.15446 (indicating that 50% of inmates wait 28 months for their first cleaning
and that 25% of inmates wait 34 months for their first cleaning).) Thus, a reasonable
factfinder could conclude that inmates with gingivitis who are still under the twoyear rule will not receive full treatment for their gingivitis for two to three years.
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But that alone does not answer the Eighth Amendment question. Instead,
Plaintiffs must further show that not receiving full gingivitis treatment for two-anda-half years (1) exposes them to a substantial risk of serious harm and (2) Defendants
know of and are indifferent to that risk. On these two fronts, the Court doubts that
Plaintiffs have the proofs they need. Even so, the Court will defer its final decision to
trial.
Start with the objective prong. There is testimony from Defendants’ expert
suggesting that untreated gingivitis will not progress to a serious harm in two-anda-half years. (ECF No. 363-8, PageID.9222; ECF No. 366-6, PageID.10769.) Indeed,
it appears that an inmate’s gingivitis would have to progress from gingivitis to early
periodontitis and then from early periodontitis to moderate (or advanced)
periodontitis before the inmate is at a substantial risk of abscess or tooth loss. In
other words, an inmate with gingivitis is a few steps removed from serious harm.
That said, nothing in the record rules out a progression to serious harm in say, twoand-a-half years. And given that there are likely hundreds of inmates with gingivitis
who are still under the two-year rule, some of those inmates surely have host factors
for rapid progression. (ECF No. 374-8, PageID.12943 (Shulman testifying that
progression depends on individualized factors); ECF No. 366-2, PageID.9872 (Harrel,
similar); ECF No. 363-8, PageID.9222 (Johnston, similar).) Thus, a reasonable
factfinder could conclude that there are numerous inmates with gingivitis who are
still under the two-year rule that are at a substantial risk of serious harm. (ECF No.
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384, PageID.15459 (Shulman noting Renetra Robinson’s progression from gingivitis
at intake to moderate periodontitis two years later).)
That leaves the question of Defendants’ indifference. As with Class IIC, Choi’s
memo presents a considerable hurdle for Plaintiffs. Choi’s memo cited “the research
and experience” of MDOC’s Dental Advisory Board and a presentation to the Board
by Johnston. (ECF No. 363-10, PageID.9504.) And the memo further stated, “The slow
rate of progression of periodontitis, when coupled with appropriate self-care, means
that as a practical matter, there is no harm done by not specifically treating, beyond
self-care, early stage periodontal conditions during the first two years of
incarceration.” (ECF No. 363-10, PageID.9504.) Although Choi was perhaps only
expressly talking about periodontitis, given that gingivitis is a less severe form of
periodontal disease, the ready inference is that he likewise believes that inmates with
gingivitis are not at a substantial risk of serious harm if they do not receive a cleaning
during their first two years of incarceration. So Choi’s memo is strong evidence that
he is not indifferent to inmates with gingivitis who are under the two-year rule.
But as noted in addressing Class IIC’s claim, Defendants did not rely on Choi’s
memo in seeking summary judgment. So, arguably, Plaintiffs had no reason to
address it and should be given an opportunity to do so. Further, during his deposition,
Choi agreed that a patient with gingivitis could progress to having early periodontitis
if they are not treated for two years. (ECF No. 363-10, PageID.9348.) Choi further
acknowledged that an inmate could progress from healthy gums to moderate
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periodontitis in a two-year period. (ECF No. 374-9, PageID.13158.) Thus, while close,
the Court will not grant Defendants summary judgment on this claim.
What about the members of Class IIB who have gingivitis and who have
already served two years? Here, the Court reaches a different result. Even setting
aside the COMS data (which might well show that the gingivitis-specific cleaning
(D4346) is being provided), it is undisputed that inmates who have served two years
are eligible for a prophylaxis once per year. See Dental Services Manual at 17; (ECF
No. 363-10, PageID.9449–9450). Even though Harrel indicates that a prophylaxis is
not the same as the gingivitis-specific cleaning, both involve scaling to remove plaque
and calculus. (ECF No. 366-2, PageID.9865–9866.) So MDOC is providing some
treatment for gingivitis. And Plaintiffs have not directed the Court to evidence
showing that a prophylaxis annually, along with good oral hygiene (something in the
inmate’s control), is “so grossly incompetent[] [or] inadequate” that it shocks the
conscience. See Rhinehart v. Scutt, 894 F.3d 721, 737 (6th Cir. 2018). The most a
reasonable factfinder could conclude is that by not providing the gingivitis-specific
cleaning, but merely a prophylaxis annually, Choi has been negligent to inmates’
gingivitis. But that does not establish deliberate indifference. See id. Accordingly,
Defendants are entitled to summary judgment on the inadequate treatment claim
brought by inmates who have gingivitis and who have served two years in prison.
Diagnosis Claims
The members of Class IIB with gingivitis also apparently challenge MDOC’s
failure to use bitewing x-rays at intake and failure to conduct periodontal probing
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and charting at any point during their incarceration. From these inmates’
perspective, MDOC’s failure to probe and take bitewing x-rays places them at a
substantial risk of underdiagnosis, which, in turn, places them at a substantial risk
of not receiving needed treatment for their gingivitis.
Conceptually, these inmates’ claims about MDOC’s diagnostic techniques
track the claims of Class IIA. The members of Class IIA, all of whom have
periodontitis or caries that have reached the dentin, assert that without probing and
bitewing x-rays, their conditions risk being underdiagnosed and thus, undertreated.
Similarly, the members of Class IIB with gingivitis apparently maintain that without
probing and bitewing x-rays, they are at a substantial risk of being diagnosed with
healthy gums and thus, they will not receive treatment for their gingivitis.
Factually, however, the inadequate-diagnosis claim brought by inmates with
gingivitis is weaker than the analogous claim brought by inmates with periodontitis.
Objectively, gingivitis is simply not as serious as periodontitis. So there is a lower
risk of serious harm from underdiagnosing gingivitis than underdiagnosing
periodontitis. (ECF No. 366-6, PageID.10769 (Johnston opining that “there’s many
patients that never progress, especially in the gingivitis stages”).) Subjectively,
although Choi may have only been referring to periodontitis, he testified that he
believes that MDOC’s diagnostic methods—visual inspection, oral-health history,
and panoramic x-ray—are sufficient to perform a periodontal evaluation. (ECF No.
363-10, PageID.9294–9295, 9297–9298, 9336.) True, in addressing Class IIA’s claim,
the Court held that a reasonable factfinder could conclude that even a “half-decent”
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dentist would perform probing to diagnose periodontitis. But it appears that probing
to diagnose gingivitis is less universal. In particular, Johnston opines that even in
private practice, the standard of care would permit a dentist to not probe a patient
with gingivitis for two years. (See ECF No. 366-6, PageID.10770, 10810–10811.)
Accordingly, Defendants are entitled to summary judgment on the claim brought by
members of Class IIB with gingivitis who claim that MDOC’s failure to perform
probing or take bitewing x-rays at intake amounts to deliberate indifference to
gingivitis.
Class IIB, Members with Healthy Gums
Treatment Claims
Inmates who do not have gingivitis or periodontitis, i.e., inmates who have
healthy gums, are also part of Class IIB. Apparently, these inmates also bring claims
of inadequate treatment and inadequate diagnosis.
The Court begins with treatment. Because these inmates have healthy gums,
it appears that the only “treatment” they seek is a standard cleaning or prophylaxis.
Historically, most new inmates waited around two-and-half years (or a bit longer) for
their first prophylaxis. (ECF No. 384, PageID.15446.) Thus, for members of Class IIB
with healthy gums, this is the pertinent question: are they at a substantial risk of
serious harm because they do not receive a cleaning for two-and-half years? On this
record, every reasonable factfinder would answer “no.”
True, as with other examples this Court has given, there are likely inmates
with healthy gums whose host factors make them particularly susceptible to rapid
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periodontal disease progression. Indeed, among the dental records Shulman
reviewed, only two inmates, Cody Ray and Reginald Harbin, were diagnosed as
having healthy gums (“WNL” or “within normal limits”) at intake. Yet, by the time of
their first complete exam over two years later, Ray had “generalized moderate
periodontal disease” and Harbin had “moderate/mild” periodontitis with “class 2
mobility” on one tooth and the prognosis for that tooth was “poor/fair.” (ECF No. 384,
PageID.15444, 15467.)
But at least in Ray’s case, it appears that he did not practice good oral hygiene.
(ECF No. 374-9, PageID.13158 (Choi discussing Ray); ECF No. 374-3, PageID.12763–
12765 (Ray’s electronic dental record).) And Defendants cannot be faulted for that.
In any event, Ray’s and Harbin’s cases merely show that it is possible for an
inmate with healthy gums to progress to a serious periodontal disease in two-andhalf years. But the Eighth Amendment does not deal in possibilities. Instead, a
“substantial” risk in the Eighth Amendment context is one that is “very likely to cause
serious illness and needless suffering, and give rise to ‘sufficiently imminent
dangers.’” Baze v. Rees, 553 U.S. 35, 49 (2008). Plaintiffs have not directed the Court
to sufficient evidence that an inmate with healthy gums who practices good oral
hygiene—something within the inmate’s control—is “very likely” to experience an
abscess, tooth loss, or other serious harm because they do not receive a cleaning for
two-and-half years. (See ECF No. 374-8, PageID.12943–12944 (Shulman stating that
there is no typical amount of time for periodontal disease progression and that it
depends on host factors).)
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In short, Defendants are entitled to summary judgment on the claim that they
are violating the Eighth Amendment by not providing healthy inmates with a dental
cleaning for two-and-half years.
And to the extent that healthy inmates who are not subject to the two-year rule
bring a similar claim, the Court notes that they are entitled to cleanings every year.
Because these inmates will receive cleanings more frequently than those subject to
the two-year rule, they are at even less risk of serious harm. It follows then, that
Defendants are entitled to summary judgment on these inmates’ treatment claim as
well.
Diagnosis Claims
Now consider members of Class IIB with healthy gums who claim that MDOC’s
method of diagnosing periodontal disease violates their Eighth Amendment rights.
Inmates with healthy gums are at the bottom of the periodontal disease ladder. So
unlike an inmate with gingivitis who, due to the lack of probing and bitewing x-rays,
can be underdiagnosed as having healthy gums, inmates with healthy gums cannot
be underdiagnosed.
Why, then, do inmates with healthy gums claim that they are at risk of harm
absent probing, charting, and bitewing x-rays? Like inmates with periodontal
disease, these inmates believe that probing and charting and bitewing x-rays are
necessary to establish their baseline periodontal health. That way, when their
periodontal health is assessed in the future, there is a point of comparison, which, in
turn, allows the dentist to gauge disease progression.
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Some evidence backs their position. For instance, Harrel opines, “[Periodontal
disease] progression varies and for that reason, the standard of care requires dental
practitioners to make comparisons over time using the original baseline derived from
periodontal probing and charting and intra-oral x-rays and comparing those objective
result[s] with subsequent periodontal probing and charting and intra-oral x-ray
results.” (ECF No. 366-2, PageID.9872.)
While the “standard of care” may require that patients with healthy gums
receive probing, charting, and bitewing x-rays, the proper question is whether
inmates with healthy gums are at a substantial risk of serious harm if they do not
receive probing, charting, and bitewing x-rays. Plaintiffs have not directed the Court
to any evidence that would permit a reasonable factfinder to answer that question
affirmatively. Harrel did not equate the “standard of care” with Eighth Amendment
standards. (See ECF No. 366-2, PageID.9857.) And while Harrel did use Eighth
Amendment terminology in opining that “[t]he MDOC’s admitted failure to require
periodontal probing and charting is below the standard of minimum care placing all
MDOC inmates at risk of serious harm of tooth morbidity and/or mortality” (ECF No.
366-2, PageID.9871), this blanket statement is not tailored to inmates with healthy
gums. And it appears much more important for inmates with periodontal disease to
have their pocket depths recorded so that dentists can gauge how fast the disease is
progressing. But inmates with healthy gums, by definition, do not have periodontal
disease that can progress.
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Accordingly, to the extent that inmates with healthy gums claim that their
Eighth Amendment rights are violated because they do receive periodontal probing,
charting, and bitewing x-rays, Defendants are entitled to summary judgment.
Class IIB, Representatives’ Claims
As noted, Defendants argue that Bownes’ and Richardson’s dental records do
not reflect any serious medical need attributable to their periodontal condition. (ECF
No. 363, PageID.8832–8833.) And so Defendants seek dismissal of Bownes’ and
Richardson’s individual claims.
This Court has twice addressed this argument in the context of Class IIA’s and
Class IIC’s claims. Although Bownes and Richardson also are representatives of Class
IIB, and although there are material, factual differences between the claims brought
by Class IIA (periodontitis diagnosis), Class IIC (periodontitis treatment), and Class
IIB (gingivitis treatment and diagnosis), the Court is not inclined to address
Defendants’ argument a third time. As stated, Defendants have not separately
analyzed the claims of Class IIA, Class IIB, and Class IIC. Further, both Bownes and
Richardson challenge MDOC’s failure to provide scaling and root planing (treatment)
and failure to probe, chart, and use bitewing x-rays (diagnosis). Those challenges are
analogous to the challenges brought by members of Class IIB with gingivitis.
Denture Claim (Class III)
The members of Class III challenge the time it takes for MDOC to provide
dentures to inmates—they say it takes too long. See Bownes v. Washington, No. 14CV-11691, 2021 WL 3700867, at *11 (E.D. Mich. Aug. 20, 2021).
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Defendants say things have changed in the nine years this case has been
pending. For instance, MDOC implemented “DentTrak,” a database that tracks a
denture from start to finish. (ECF No. 363, PageID.8840.) According to Defendants,
providing an inmate with dentures involves seven steps and six shipments. (ECF No.
363, PageID.8841.) As such, they say a 180-day time-to-completion is reasonable, and
that in the year preceding February 28, 2022, they hit that mark 83% of the time.
(ECF No. 363, PageID.8841.) For these and other reasons, Defendants say they are
entitled to summary judgment on Class III’s claim.
In their response to Defendants’ summary-judgment motion, Plaintiffs use the
word “denture” exactly once. (ECF No. 374, PageID.12743.) They make no argument
in support of Class III’s claim. They do not dispute that a 180-day time-to-completion
is reasonable or that MDOC is hitting that mark at an 83% clip. Even in their own
motion for summary judgment, dentures are mentioned only in the most cursory way.
(ECF No. 366, PageID.9817.)
Because Plaintiffs have opposed other aspects of Defendants’ summaryjudgment motion but have not opposed Defendants’ arguments about dentures, Class
III, and its representative, James Gunnels, have abandoned their claims. See Brown
v. VHS of Michigan, Inc., 545 F. App’x 368, 372 (6th Cir. 2013) (“[A] plaintiff is
deemed to have abandoned a claim when a plaintiff fails to address it in response to
a motion for summary judgment.”). Accordingly, the Court will grant Defendants
summary judgment on Class III’s and Gunnel’s claims.
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Brownell’s Urgent Care Claim
The members of Class IVB challenged the time it took for MDOC to provide
urgent care. By stipulation of the parties, Class IVB’s claim was dismissed. (ECF No.
346, PageID.8486.) Apparently believing that this stipulation did not encompass the
claims of Class IVB’s representative, Timothy Brownell, Defendants seek summary
judgment on Brownell’s individual claims. (ECF No. 363, PageID.8849–8850.)
As with Class III claims, Plaintiffs have not opposed Defendants’ arguments
on Brownell’s claims. According, the Court will grant Defendants summary judgment
on Brownell’s individual claims.
Plaintiffs’ Motion for Summary Judgment
So far, the Court has largely focused on Defendants’ motion for summary
judgment. But Plaintiffs seek summary judgment too.
Ultimately, Plaintiffs have the burden of proving their Eighth Amendment
claims. That means to win summary judgment, Plaintiffs must show that even when
taking the facts in the light most favorable to Defendants, every reasonable factfinder
would find for them. See Surles v. Andison, 678 F.3d 452, 455–56 (6th Cir. 2012);
Hotel 71 Mezz Lender LLC v. Nat’l Ret. Fund, 778 F.3d 593, 601 (7th Cir. 2015).
Plaintiffs have not carried this burden. What has been said so far probably
makes this apparent. But as a double check, the Court highlights a few points made
earlier.
The members of Class IIA claim inaccurate diagnosis of their periodontitis and
caries. A reasonable factfinder could conclude that MDOC’s diagnostic methods are
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accurate for at least some easy-to-identify cases of periodontitis and caries. (See ECF
No. 366-10, PageID.11730 (MDOC dentist Smith testifying that she can often
diagnose periodontitis by visual inspection and panoramic x-rays); ECF No. 366-6,
PageID.10784 (Johnston testifying that it is “possible” to diagnose advanced
periodontitis with only visual inspection and panoramic x-ray).) Moreover, Plaintiffs
have not addressed Choi’s repeated statements that he believes that visual inspection
and a panoramic x-ray suffice to evaluate periodontitis. (ECF No. 363-10,
PageID.9293-9294, 9297–9298, 9322, 9336.) Indeed, Plaintiffs’ motion consists of
page after page of deposition testimony that probing and bitewing x-rays are the
standard for diagnosing periodontitis, but Plaintiffs make little effort to map these
facts onto the elements of an Eighth Amendment claim. (See ECF No. 366,
PageID.9852–9853.) So the Court will not grant Plaintiffs summary judgment on
Class IIA’s claims. See Hotel 71 Mezz Lender LLC v. Nat’l Ret. Fund, 778 F.3d 593,
601 (7th Cir. 2015) (“Where, as here, the movant is seeking summary judgment on a
claim as to which it bears the burden of proof, it must lay out the elements of the
claim, cite the facts which it believes satisfies these elements, and demonstrate why
the record is so one-sided as to rule out the prospect of a finding in favor of the nonmovant on the claim.”).
The members of Class IIC claim inadequate treatment for their periodontitis.
But, as explained, for those past the two-year mark, COMS data suggests that MDOC
is providing scalings and root planings. And, as discussed, Defendants should have
the opportunity to present that data at trial because this case is about prospective
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injunctive relief. So members of Class IIC past the two-year mark are not entitled to
summary judgment. For those within the two-year window, Choi’s memo—right or
wrong—suggests that he is not indifferent to their periodontitis. Plaintiffs have not
addressed Choi’s memo, and even though Plaintiffs’ experts disagree with the memo,
the evidence must be taken in the light most favorable to Defendants at the summaryjudgment stage. So to the extent that Plaintiffs have sought summary judgment on
Class IIC’s claims (which their motion does not even make clear), their request will
be denied.
That leaves Class IIB. The Court has granted Defendants summary judgment
on the claims brought by members of this class with healthy gums. As for Class IIB
members with gingivitis, Plaintiffs have not specifically argued that inmates with
gingivitis are, as a matter of law, at a substantial risk of serious harm and further,
that Choi is indifferent to that harm. And the Court believes that a reasonable
factfinder could find that two to three years without treatment is not a substantial
risk of serious harm for some inmates with gingivitis (e.g., those with good oral
hygiene and host factors favoring slow progression). And a reasonable factfinder could
find that Choi is not indifferent to at least those inmates’ gingivitis. As for diagnosis,
a reasonable factfinder could likewise conclude that many inmates with gingivitis
who are underdiagnosed with healthy gums are not at a substantial risk of serious
harm or, if they are, Choi is not indifferent to that risk.
Accordingly, the Court will deny Plaintiffs’ motion for summary judgment.
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Conclusion and Order
For the reasons given, the Court DENIES Plaintiffs’ motion for summary
judgment (ECF No. 366). Plaintiffs’ motion to file a sur-reply (ECF No. 380) is
GRANTED to the extent that the Court did not consider the COMS data in addressing
Defendants’ motion for summary judgment.
Further, the Court GRANTS IN PART and DENIES IN PART Defendants’
motion for summary judgment (ECF No. 363) as follows:
Bownes’ facial challenge to the two-year rule is DISMISSED;
Class IIA’s Eighth Amendment claim based on inadequate diagnosis of
periodontitis and caries will proceed to trial;
The inadequate-treatment claim under the Eighth Amendment brought by
members of Class IIB with gingivitis who have not yet served two years will
proceed to trial, but the same claim brought by members of Class IIB with
gingivitis who have served two years will be DISMISSED;
The inadequate-diagnosis claim under the Eighth Amendment brought by
members of Class IIB with gingivitis will be DISMISSED;
The inadequate-diagnosis and inadequate-treatment claims under the Eighth
Amendment brought by members of Class IIB with healthy gums will be
DISMISSED;
Class IIC’s Eighth Amendment claim based on inadequate treatment of
periodontitis will proceed to trial;
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Class III’s and James Gunnels’ claim based on MDOC’s provision of dentures
is DISMISSED; and
Timothy Brownell’s claim based on MDOC’s provision of urgent care is
DISMISSED.
The parties are to complete a 90-day period of discovery that will close on April
30, 2023. Defendants are to produce to Plaintiffs COMS data that Defendants intend
to use at trial. As noted, the Court expects the trial proofs to reflect how often scalings
and root planings are being performed. More probative than a pure count of the
number of procedures would be data showing the number of times the treatment was
provided as compared to the number of times the treatment was needed. Additionally,
it would be useful to separate data for inmates subject to the two-year rule, and those
who are not subject to that rule. Defendants are to produce the evidence they intend
to use at trial to Plaintiffs on or before March 15, 2023. (The data provided need not
be in the exact format that Defendants will use it at trial.) Plaintiffs then have until
April 30, 2023 to conduct a two-hour deposition of one witness, with the scope of the
deposition limited to the discovery Defendants produced. If either side chooses to
supplement their expert reports based on the COMS data, they must provide the
opposing side with the supplement on or before April 30, 2023.
SO ORDERED.
Dated: January 26, 2023
s/Laurie J. Michelson
LAURIE J. MICHELSON
UNITED STATES DISTRICT JUDGE
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