×
You've used up your 3 free articles for this month. Subscribe today.
7th Circuit Defines "Serious Medical Needs"
Loaded on Feb. 15, 1998
published in Prison Legal News
February, 1998, page 18
The court of appeals for the seventh circuit announced that medical conditions that cause pain, but are not life threatening, constitute serious medical needs for eighth amendment purposes. In doing so, the court clarified this area of law for the seventh circuit. Carlos Gutierrez is an Illinois state prisoner who ...
Full article and associated cases available to subscribers.
As a digital subscriber to Prison Legal News, you can access full text and downloads for this and other premium content.
Already a subscriber? Login
More from this issue:
- Juvenile Crime Pays, by Alex Friedmann
- Bureau of Prisons Gag Rule Enacted
- From the Editor, by Dan Pens
- Washington "Bulk Mail" Ban of PLN Struck Down
- Where to Now For Prison Smoking?, by Paul Wright
- Resources for Smoking Litigation: Health Effects of Smoking; Legal Cases on Smoking
- Actual Injury Required in Legal Mail Claim
- KS S.Ct. Affirms Trust Account "Service Fee"
- No Immunity for Delaying Arthritis Treatment
- Deaf Prisoners in Washington Seek Class-Wide Relief, by David C Fathi
- Union Denounces Prison Labor
- Florida PRIDE Employees Denied Minimum Wages, by James Quigley
- PRIDE Eyes Private Markets
- No Immunity for Florida Private Jail
- PLRA Requires Winning Prisoner to Pay 25% of Defendants' Atty Fees
- Exposure to Cold States Claim Exhaustion Requirement of PLRA Not Retroactive
- PLRA Attorney Fee Restrictions Not Retroactive
- WSP Ban on Gift Subscriptions Enjoined
- Trial Required in Oklahoma Beating Case
- News in Brief
- New York Prisoner Settles Excessive Force Case for $25,000
- Legal Papers Must be Returned to Owner; Prisoner Legal Mail Banned
- 7th Circuit Defines "Serious Medical Needs"
- Inadequate Prison Security Violates 8th Amendment
- Damages Suit Stayed While Habeas Pursued in Disciplinary Hearing Challenge
- Idaho Court Access Class Action Suit Proceeds
- Iowa Prison Nurse Liable in Birthing
- West Virginia Prisoners Lose Computers
- Cold Cell Violates 8th Amendment
- Grand Jury Indicts 45 Texas Prisoners
- Rhode Island Ban on Royalties to Felon Authors Struck Down
- Second Circuit Rules on Appointment of Counsel
More from these topics:
- Regional Jail in Kentucky Settles DOJ Complaint, Agrees to Provide Treatment for Opioid Use Disorder, Sept. 15, 2024. Complaints, Drug Treatment/Rehab, Drug Testing/Treatment Programs.
- Washington Superior Court Says Jail Cannot Bill Poor Detainees for Medical Care, May 1, 2024. Medical, Seizure of Prisoner Funds, Booking Fees.
- Fourth Circuit: South Carolina Prisoner’s Bivens Claim Must Detail Unconstitutional Acts of Each Defendant, April 26, 2024. Complaints, Civil Rights Actions or Offenses/Bivens Actions, Dismissal.
- Potential Dangers of Medical Monitors, April 15, 2024. Medical, Police State-Surveillance, Electronic Surveillance.
- Seventh Circuit Reinstates Wisconsin Prisoner’s ADA Claim for Untreated Knee Injury, March 1, 2024. Failure to Treat, Bedding, Complaints, Americans with Disabilities Act, Sufficiency of Pleadings, Deliberate Indifference.
- Wellpath Held in Contempt in Suit at California Jail, March 1, 2024. California Forensic Medical Group, Medical, Systemic Medical Neglect, Dental Care, Contempt (Civil Procedure), Mental Health.
- Sick Georgia Prisoners Forced to Choose Between Treatment and Early Release, March 1, 2024. Work Release, Commentary/Reviews, Medical, Hepatitis, Probation, Parole & Supervised Release.
- California Slowed, But Not Barred from “Dumping” Sick, Indigent Parolees on Public Hospitals, March 1, 2024. Medical, Injunctions, Probation, Parole & Supervised Release, Medical Care/Treatment, Compassionate Release.
- Second Circuit Strips Qualified Immunity from Connecticut Officials Who Ignored Prisoner’s Scalp Lesions, Jan. 1, 2024. Skin, Failure to Treat, Infections, Qualified Immunity, Medical Expenses/Treatment, Dismissal, Deliberate Indifference.
- Eleventh Circuit Says Florida Prisoner’s Dismissed Complaint Doesn’t Count as a “Strike”, Dec. 1, 2023. Complaints, Dismissal, Prison Litigation Reform Act (PLRA), Three Strike Litigants.