LEGAL ASPECTS OF MEDICAL PRACTICE

4,706 views 163 slides Jan 26, 2023
Slide 1
Slide 1 of 163
Slide 1
1
Slide 2
2
Slide 3
3
Slide 4
4
Slide 5
5
Slide 6
6
Slide 7
7
Slide 8
8
Slide 9
9
Slide 10
10
Slide 11
11
Slide 12
12
Slide 13
13
Slide 14
14
Slide 15
15
Slide 16
16
Slide 17
17
Slide 18
18
Slide 19
19
Slide 20
20
Slide 21
21
Slide 22
22
Slide 23
23
Slide 24
24
Slide 25
25
Slide 26
26
Slide 27
27
Slide 28
28
Slide 29
29
Slide 30
30
Slide 31
31
Slide 32
32
Slide 33
33
Slide 34
34
Slide 35
35
Slide 36
36
Slide 37
37
Slide 38
38
Slide 39
39
Slide 40
40
Slide 41
41
Slide 42
42
Slide 43
43
Slide 44
44
Slide 45
45
Slide 46
46
Slide 47
47
Slide 48
48
Slide 49
49
Slide 50
50
Slide 51
51
Slide 52
52
Slide 53
53
Slide 54
54
Slide 55
55
Slide 56
56
Slide 57
57
Slide 58
58
Slide 59
59
Slide 60
60
Slide 61
61
Slide 62
62
Slide 63
63
Slide 64
64
Slide 65
65
Slide 66
66
Slide 67
67
Slide 68
68
Slide 69
69
Slide 70
70
Slide 71
71
Slide 72
72
Slide 73
73
Slide 74
74
Slide 75
75
Slide 76
76
Slide 77
77
Slide 78
78
Slide 79
79
Slide 80
80
Slide 81
81
Slide 82
82
Slide 83
83
Slide 84
84
Slide 85
85
Slide 86
86
Slide 87
87
Slide 88
88
Slide 89
89
Slide 90
90
Slide 91
91
Slide 92
92
Slide 93
93
Slide 94
94
Slide 95
95
Slide 96
96
Slide 97
97
Slide 98
98
Slide 99
99
Slide 100
100
Slide 101
101
Slide 102
102
Slide 103
103
Slide 104
104
Slide 105
105
Slide 106
106
Slide 107
107
Slide 108
108
Slide 109
109
Slide 110
110
Slide 111
111
Slide 112
112
Slide 113
113
Slide 114
114
Slide 115
115
Slide 116
116
Slide 117
117
Slide 118
118
Slide 119
119
Slide 120
120
Slide 121
121
Slide 122
122
Slide 123
123
Slide 124
124
Slide 125
125
Slide 126
126
Slide 127
127
Slide 128
128
Slide 129
129
Slide 130
130
Slide 131
131
Slide 132
132
Slide 133
133
Slide 134
134
Slide 135
135
Slide 136
136
Slide 137
137
Slide 138
138
Slide 139
139
Slide 140
140
Slide 141
141
Slide 142
142
Slide 143
143
Slide 144
144
Slide 145
145
Slide 146
146
Slide 147
147
Slide 148
148
Slide 149
149
Slide 150
150
Slide 151
151
Slide 152
152
Slide 153
153
Slide 154
154
Slide 155
155
Slide 156
156
Slide 157
157
Slide 158
158
Slide 159
159
Slide 160
160
Slide 161
161
Slide 162
162
Slide 163
163

About This Presentation

Legal Aspects of Medical Care
Laws applicable to Medical Care


Slide Content

LEGAL ASPECTS
OF Medical Care
Prof. SyedAminTabish
FRCP (London), FRCP (Edin.), FACP, FAMS, MHA (AIIMS)
Postdoc Fellowship, Bristol University (England)
Doctorate in Educational Leadership (USA)

Legal Aspects of Medical
Practice
•With knowledge explosion and
technological advances mainly
aimed to provide high quality
medical care to individual
patients, the need for a careful
construction of a professional
ethics is urgent.
•Citizen’s charter on Health
Services
•Consumer Protection Act

Why Ethics
•Patients are
increasingly aware of
what they believe to be
their human rights&
expect doctors to
respect them

The Duties of Clinical Care
Rights of patients may be
summarized by 3
corresponding duties of
care which apply to all
patients:
-Protect life & health
-Respect Autonomy
-Fairness & justice

1. The Duties of Clinical care
•Protect Life & Health
(clinicians to practice
medicine to high
standard not to cause
unnecessary
harm/suffering)

2. The Duties of Clinical Care
Respect Autonomy:
•Humans have autonomy –the
ability to reason, plan and make
choices about the future
•Doctors are required to respect
these attributes (respect for the
dignity):
-informed consent
-confidentiality (per info)
Denying pts. such choice & control
robs them of their human dignity

3. Fairness & justice
•The access to & quality of clinical care
should be need-based rather than
favoritism
•Injustice can occur through treating
patients unequally according to:
-socioeconomic status
-physical attraction
-profession
-age
-race
Equal Access to appropriate care
according to NEED

Why should Doctors take these
duties seriously?
•Professional regulation (Medical
Council)
•The Law (duties are also enshrined
in the constitution/statue/common
law)
-Doctors may be sued in Civil
Law for financial compensation for
any harm (failure in professional
duty)
-If this harm is intentional:
Criminal Law will apply

Why should Doctors take these
duties seriously?
•Rational Self-interest: support
the right of all patients to high
standard of care
•The clinical importance of trust:
lack of trust will spoil the quality
of pt. care & professional life
•The Doctor-Patient Relationship:
treat pts. As active partners in
healing process; Problem -solving
is by doctors; Decision-making is
by both (Doctor & Patient)

Medical Mistakes
Clinical Negligence
•Patient must provide
evidence to the Court that:
-they were harmed
-the harm was caused by
the accused doctor
-the action that causes the
harm was a breach of
professional duty

Challenges
•Consent
•Medical negligence
•Medical reports
•Certificates
•Sexual offenses
•Confidentiality
•Terminal illness
•Withdrawing of life-support

Ethics is everyone’s responsibility
•The relationship of patient to
his physician is by its very
nature one of the most
intimate
•Foundation: doctor is learned,
skilled & experienced in
afflictions of body about which
patient ordinarily knows little
(but are very imp for him)

Ethics is everyone’s
responsibility
•Patient must place great
reliance, faith & confidence in
the professional
word/advice/acts of doctor
•Doctor must act with utmost
good faith & to speak fairly &
truthfully to the peril of being
held liable for damages for deceit
or fraud

Fundamental Right
•No person shall be deprived of
his life (life with human
dignity)
•Emergency care is right of
every citizen
•When a person who is innocent
or criminal has met with an
accident, it is the obligation of
health providers to protect his
life

Legal Necessity
•Every doctor under law
bound by a contract to serve
its patient and cannot refuse
treatment.Every doctor has
to fulfill certain legal
requirements in service by
compulsion or voluntarily as
defined under law.

Building Confidence
•A good working
knowledge of the law in
this regard, coupled with a
thorough understanding of
the correct method of
dealing with legal aspects
helps one to build
confidence over riding the
fear of LAW

Medical Laws
•The Legal aspects of medical
practice broadly covers two
areas of medical laws:
Medical Jurisprudence : It
deals with legal aspects of
medical practice.
•Forensic Medicine: It deals
with medical aspects of law.

Sources of Law
•PRIMARY SOURCES: Laws passed by the
Parliament or the State Legislative
•Ordinances passed by the President and the
Governor
•Subordinate legislation: Rules and regulations
made by the executive through the power
delegated to them by the Acts.
•SECONDARY SOURCES: Judgments of the
Supreme Court, High Court and Tribunals (The
ratio decedendi is a binding precedent)
•Judicial legislation
•Judgment of Foreign Courts
•International Treaty

MEDICALETHICSANDCONDUCT
•Apart from his routine and usual “clinical”
cases, a doctor will come across certain
‘Medicolegal’ issues at one time or the
other during the practice of his profession.
•Duties and obligations of doctors are
enlisted in the laws of the land and
different Codes of Medical Ethics and
Declaration:
Hippocratic Oath
Declaration of Geneva
Declaration of Helsinki on medical
research
International Code of Medical Ethics

Declaration of Geneva
•The Declaration of Geneva of the
WMA binds the physician with
the words, "The health of my
patient will be my first
consideration,“ and the
International Code of Medical
Ethics declares that, "A physician
shall act in the patient's best
interest when providing medical
care

Legal responsibility of hospital
•Hospital is a public institution
•Deals with life and death
•Hence carries specified responsibilities &
liabilities within and outside the hospital
•Failure to comply invites legal action
•Legal responsibilities are bound to
different category of people and
institution by contracts
•Breach of any contract held the hospital
legally responsible

Emergency Doctrine
•In Emergencies, CONSENT
can be implied in the law if
immediate treatment is
necessary to avoid life-or
limb-threatening condition
•Clinical management should
precede the legal duties in
trauma cases brought for
treatment

Medical Negligence
•A doctor must posses a
reasonable degree of
proficiency & apply the
proficiency with a reasonable
degree of diligence
•Failure of the doctor to provide
medical services (with requisite
skill & care) gives rise to action
in medical negligence under
criminal, civil or consumer court

Medical Negligence
•A doctor is negligent if he
doesn't offer his services in
an emergency situation
•A doctor breaches his duty of
care when he fails to reach
the standard of proficiency
expected of him

Legal concept of Negligence
•Human Behaviour towards
others: failure to act reasonably
& prudently
•Failure or breach of duty owed to
the patient doctor has the
obligation to perform that duty in
a manner that will bring it to a
successful conclusion)
•Damage to the individual for
breach of duty (there must be some
damage to the patient resulting from breach
of duty owed)

Medical malpractice
•The plaintiff must prove that the
treatment given was below the
degree and skill expected of a
competent doctor and that the
negligence proximately caused
the injury or death……….. The
bare possibility of causation will
not suffice

TORT
•Civil wrong(negligence) committed
by one individual against another is
known as TORT, where, a person fails
to take proper care, so that damage
results
•Civil Lawdeals with legal actions
which seek the redress of wrongs
which are not criminal in nature
•Criminal Lawinvolves a legal action
filed by a state government against
defendants and deals with definitions
of crimes and their punishment

Negligence
•Harmful conduct that deviates
from accepted standards of duty
& care
•A doctor who injures a patient by
conduct that fails to meet the
legal standard of due care may
be liable for negligence in an
action for malpractice

Specific elements of Negligence
In order for a complaining party to
sustain an action for negligence against
a defending party, 4 elements must be
proved in the court of law:
•Existence of doctor-patient relationship
giving rise to a duty of due care
•Breach of that duty
•Proximate cause (injury):Fall from a
Stretcher in ED sustains bruises/MI after 4 months;
is unlikely to rove that the fall caused MI
•Damages

Res Ipsa Loquitur
•In most malpractice cases, the
plaintiff is required to prove
negligence through the testimony of
an expert medical witness
•An exception: doctrine of res ipsa
loquitur(the thing speaks for itself):
when medical mishap could not be
due to someone’s negligence
(presence of a sponge or clamp in the
body cavity of a patient who has had
surgery is a self-evident indication of
negligent conduct by some member of
the operating team)

Error of Clinical Judgment
•Some mishaps are unavoidable,
being within the wide range of
variability and uncertainty that is
inherent in biological processes
•Common causes for negligent
actions include failure to attend,
amputation of wrong limb or
digit, missed fractures,, tight
plaster casts, poor results from
spinal procedures, damage to
newborn from anoxia or forceps

Error of clinical judgment -II
•Removal of healthy kidney
instead of pathological
•Operation on healthy eye
•Leaving gauze or instrument in
the body cavity during surgery
•Anesthetic errors
•Not performing sensitivity tests
for certain drugs before
administering
•Failed tubal sterilization

Malpractice
•Professional negligence
•Lack of reasonable care &
skill
•Willful negligence in the
treatment of a patient
whereby the health or life of
a patient is endangered

Criminal Negligence
•Negligence is so great as to go
beyond matter of mere
compensation
•Not only the doctor has made
wrong diagnosis and treatment,
but he/she has shown gross
neglect for life and safety of the
patient
•Doctor may be prosecuted for
having caused injury or death of a
patient by a rash & negligent act
amounting to culpable homicide

CONSENT
•One of the most basic human rights
is freedom from physical interference
•A person of sufficient maturity and
mental capacity can choose whether
to submit to the ministrations of a
doctor
•With few exceptions, consent to
examination is an absolute
prerequisite before a doctor
approaches the patient
•Failure to obtain consent may lead to
recovery of damages in a civil action

Battery
•Battery:an unpermitted
contact with the patient
•A clinician who fails to
obtain consent for
treatment or who provides
treatment beyond or
contrary to what the patient
has consented to

Types of Consent
•Implied Consent:is provided by the
behaviour of the patient; e.g. patient
presents at Outpatient Clinic
•Express Consent:Any thing other
than implied consent. It may be oral
or written
•Informed Consent: consent must be
obtained after a reasonable
explanation of the proposed
procedure to patient, so that he is
enable to make informed decision
whether or not to submit

The Extension Doctrine
•Provides an exception to the general
rule that a patient’s consent is limited
to those procedures contemplated
when consent is given
•If in the course of authorized medical
intervention a doctor discovers a life-
threatening condition that requires
immediate treatment and the patient
is unable to consent (e.g. under
anesthesia), the doctor may extend
the operation or procedure without
the patient’s express consent

Therapeutic privilege
•A situation where full disclosure to the
patient might be harmful and therefore
contraindicated, a doctor may have a
therapeutic privilege to withhold
information
•This privilege avails only when the
patient’s distress and apprehension are
so great that full disclosure of all risks
might cause emotional harm or induce
the patient to refuse treatment, fail to
cooperate with treatment, or make an
irrational choice of treatment
alternatives
•Used in rare circumstances only

Medical reports & certificates
•Reports on the medical conditions
of a person (victim or
accused)folowing injury
•Death certificate
•Reports for Life-insurance
•Certificate of illness
•Certificate of fitness
•All these documents must be
prepared with meticulous accuracy

Sexual Assault (Rape)
•Rape is a legal conclusion and not
a medical diagnosis
•The medical diagnosis of a rape
victim should be limited to the
actual clinical findings at the time
of examination
•If female Gynecologist fail to reach
the fact definitely, or if
circumstances so demand, take the
judge permission to have the
victim examined by male forensic
doctor

Medical Exam. of a female
The medical examination by a
Gynecologist or Forensic
Doctor of a woman subjected
to sexual assault shall be
done in presence of:
•guardian
•female general practitioner
•nurse

Report
Incidents requiring a report
to the proper official relevant
agencies while maintaining
as much patient
confidentiality as possible,
include:
•Drug & chemical poisoning
•Road traffic accident
•Gun-shot wounds
•Physical assault

Gunshot & Stab Wounds
•Reports of
these acts of
violence are
usually made
to police

Dead-on-Arrival
•If the case of death is natural, death
certificate & burying license must be
submitted to relatives
•Un-natural death: be reported to police
for possible investigation & for
assessment of need for a referral to
forensic medicine sp.
•Initiate resuscitation unless it is clear
that patient has been dead for some
time
•Mention that deceased was brought
dead
•Body to be examined by a committee
•In case there is no clear cause of death,
take 50 ml blood in plain tube & send to
Toxicology Centre

Cause of Death
•In case the results (from
toxicology lab) are negative, the
cause of death can be mentioned
as “Death possible due to hidden
disease leading to
cardiopulmonary arrest”
•All dead bodies should be kept
for 2 hours before transferring to
mortuary
•Patient’s belongings should be
handed over to relatives, if the
cause of death is natural.

Medico-legal cases
•A case or injury or ailment
where an attending doctor after
taking history & clinical
examination of the patient,
thinks that some investigation
by law-enforcing agencies are
essential so as to fix
responsibility regarding the case
in accordance with the law of
the land

Medico-legal cases
•Motor vehicle accidents (RTAs)
•Factory/industry accidents
•Suspected homicide, suicide
•Poisoning
•Burn injuries
•Injury where foul play is suspected
•Sexual offenses
•Unconscious cases where cause is not
known
•Cases brought dead with improper
history
•Cases referred by Court

MLC Injury Report
•Must be prepared on the appropriate form
•Should be written in a neat and legible
handwriting by the examining doctor
•Report should be completed as early as
possible after examining the person
•Time of examination along with date
•Where nature of injury cannot be
ascertained, patient must be kept under
observation and admitted in ward
•General physical examination should
always be undertaken & findings recorded
•Opinion will depend on X-ray & other
reports

Preservation of trace evidence
•All clothing worn by an
injured and removed in the
hospital shall be preserved,
packed after drying
•Gastric lavage, bullet pellets
etc. taken out of the body of
a patient be preserved in
sealed containers & labeled
properly, preserved under
safe custody

Doctor’s Defence
•When something untoward
happens following a diagnostic or
therapeutic procedure, the doctor
must take following step/s:
–complete the patient’s record & recheck
the written notes
–be frank enough and inform clearly of the
mishap and show genuine concern about
the unfortunate mishap
–contact professional bodies to seek advice
–professional indemnity insurance cover

Hospital: A Glimpse

Health Law
•field of legal practice,
scholarship and law reform
relating to the delivery of health
care
•deals with health care delivery at
macro and micro level
•rapidly expanding and dynamic
field -scientific, social,
economic, legal, philosophical
and political influences

Why Study Health Law?
•all aspects of the practice of
medicine, and healthcare more
broadly, are affected by the law
•important for physicians to have
an awareness of how the law
affects them and their patients
•Medical Council of India expects
competency in this area

Influences on Development of Health Law
•health care reform movement (re
organization and financing of
health care system)
•increasing litigation and new
types of litigation
–e.g. class action suits re medical
devices
–wrongful life lawsuits

Influences on the Development of
Health Law
•advances in science and technology
–e.g. genetic research
–reproductive technologies
•advances in information technology
–computerized patient information
–vast amount of health info on the
internet
•evolution of field of bioethics,
increasing influence of new
perspectives

Law and Ethics
•law influenced by ethics and to some
extent the converse is true
•obviously important to comply with the
law, but what the law says may not be
the ultimate answer to a moral question
•many ethical principles re medical
practice now codified -tends to blur the
distinction (rules-based vs. virtue
ethics)
•some similarities in reasoning -
clarifying facts, principles and their
application

Overview of the Indian
Legal System
•where does the law come
from?
•areas of law
•Indian constitutional
framework
•the court system

Sources of Law
•Legislation
–statutes
–regulations
–federal and provincial
•Judicial Decisions
–sometimes referred to as the
“common law”
–precedents

Nature of the Law
•degree of uncertainty
•role of judicial
interpretation
•constantly evolving

Divisions of Law
•Public Law
–disputes between individual and
state
–e.g. criminal law, administrative
law, constitutional law
•Private Law
–sometimes referred to as “civil law”
–disputes between individuals
–e.g. torts, contracts, property law

Health Law Topics
•Country’s health care system
–structure, funding, supply of and
access to health services
•regulation of health professionals
e.g. MD’s
•medical negligence
•consent
•confidentiality and disclosure of
health information

Health Law Topics
•medical care of minors
•medical care of patients with
mental disabilities
•abortion
•regulation of reproductive
technologies
•genetics and the law
•end of life decision making
•medical research

Regulation of theMedical Profession
•state responsibility
•“self-regulating” professions
•body created by statute in each
province
–e.g. Medical Board
–standards for licensure
–deals with allegations of
incompetence, incapacity or
misconduct
–can generate its own policies,
guidelines

Civil Liability
•a.k.a. negligence,
“malpractice”, “getting sued”
•law in this area mostly
“judge-made”
•informed consent
•standard of care

Complex Emerging Issues
–e.g. reproductive technologies
–electronic health care records -
privacy issues
–cost constraints -impact on insured
services and on individual care
•complex issues affected by
several sources and divisions of
law (courts, legislatures, federal,
provincial, criminal, civil, Charter
of Rights) as well as ethics,
public policy

Laws Applicable to EMS
•Legal vs. Ethical vs. Moral
Responsibilities
•Review of the Legal System
•Specific Laws Applicable to EMS
•Accountability & Malpractice
•Specific Paramedic-Patient
Issues
•Operational Issues
•Documentation

Legal vs. Ethical vs. Moral
Responsibilities
•What are the
differences?
–Legal
Responsibilities
–Ethical Standards
–Morality

The Legal System
•Sources of Law
–Constitutional
–Common
–Legislative
–Administrative
•Legislative and Administrative
are often the focus of EMS
Providers

The Legal System
•Federal vs. State Court
•Categories of Law
–Criminal Law
–Civil Law
•Tort Law
What are examples of how each of these may affect the paramedic?

The Legal System
•Terminology
–Plaintiff
–Defendant
–Discovery phase
•Deposition
•Interrogation
•Documentation
–Appeal

Laws Affecting EMS
•Motor Vehicle Laws
•Infectious Disease Exposure
•Assault against Public Safety
Officer
•Obstruction of Duty
•Good Samaritan Law :offering
legal protection to an individual who
voluntarily provides care during an
emergency situation

Does India Need A Good Samaritan Law?
•According to WHO accidents kill
more than 200 people on roads
every day in India. You must
have awed at the number and
must have even cursed the
people who were the cause for
such a loss. However do you
know more than those rash
drivers you are also one of the
reason for such a loss.

Laws Affecting EMS
•Mandatory Reporting
–Domestic violence
–Child & Elder abuse
–Criminal Acts
–GSW, Stabbing & Assault
–Animal Bites
–Communicable Diseases
–Out of hospital deaths
–Possession of Controlled
Substances

Accountability & Malpractice Issues
•Standard of Care
•Negligence
•Civil Litigation Specifics
•Borrowed Servant Doctrine
•Patient Civil Rights
•Liability when off-duty

Borrowed Servant Doctrine
•The common law principle
that the employer of a
borrowed employee, rather
than the employee’s regular
employer, is liable for the
employee’s actions that occur
while the employee is under
the control of the temporary
employer.

Accountability & Malpractice
•Standard of Care
–The expected care, skill, & judgment under
similar circumstances by a similarly trained,
reasonable paramedic
•Negligence
–Deviation from accepted or expected
standards of care expected to protect from
unreasonable risk of harm
What are the required components for proof of a
negligence claim in EMS?

Accountability & Malpractice
•Civil Cases
–Proof of guilt required by a
“preponderance of evidence”
–“res ipsa loquitur”
•Burden of proof shifts to the defendant
•Simple vs. Gross Negligence

Defenses
•Good Samaritan Law
•Government Immunity
•Statue of Limitations
•Contributory Negligence

Accountability & Malpractice
•How do these affect the Paramedic’s
Practice?
–Borrowed Servant Doctrine
–Patient Civil Rights
–Liability when Off-Duty

Specific Paramedic-Patient
Issues
•Issues Surrounding
Consent
•Refusals
•Restraint
•Abandonment
•Transfer of Patient
Care
•Advance Directives
& End of Life
Decisions
•Out of Hospital
Death
•Confidentiality &
Privacy

Specific Paramedic-Patient
Issues
•Issues Surrounding Consent
–Patient has legal & mental capacity
–Patient understands consequences
–Types of Consent
•Informed
•Expressed
•Implied
•Involuntary

Specific Paramedic-Patient
Issues
•Issues Surrounding Consent
–Specific Consent Issues
•Minors
•Emancipated Minor
•Prisoners

Specific Paramedic-Patient
Issues
•Refusals
–Consent for Transport vs. Treatment
–Withdrawing Consent
–Refusal of Service
•Has legal & mental capacity
•Is informed of risks & benefits
•Offer alternatives
•All of the above are well documented &
witnessed

Specific Paramedic-Patient
Issues
•Refusals
–Incompetent Persons
•Unable to understand the nature &
consequences of his/her injury/illness
•Unable to make rational decisions regarding
medical care due to physical or mental
conditions
•Do not assume incompetence unless
obvious

Specific Paramedic-Patient
Issues
•Restraint
–Definitions
•Assault
•Battery
•False Imprisonment

Specific Paramedic-Patient
Issues
•Restraint
–In Custody of Law Enforcement or
Corrections
–Patient is not competent to refuse &
requires care
–Patient is a danger to self or others
(involve law enforcement)
–Does not provide authorization to harm!

Specific Paramedic-Patient
Issues
•Restraint
–Involve Law Enforcement Early
–Have a plan of action
–Ensure safety of all
–Reasonable force
–Physical restraints
–Chemical restraints
–Document well

Specific Paramedic-Patient
Issues
•Patient Abandonment
–Unilateral termination of the patient-
provider relationship
•Still needed and desired
–Exceptions
•MCI
•Risks to well-being
Can a paramedic turn over care of a patient to an EMT?

Specific Paramedic-Patient
Issues
•Transfer of Patient Care
–Transfer of Care to other Providers
–Transfer of Care at the ED

Specific Paramedic-Patient
Issues
•Advanced Directives & End of Life
Decisions
–Definitions
•Advanced Directive
•Out of Hospital DNR
•DNR vs. DNAR
•Living Will
•Durable Power of Attorney for Health Care
•Patient Self-Determination Act

Specific Paramedic-Patient
Issues
•Advanced Directives & End of Life
Decisions
–Living Will
–Durable Power of Attorney for Health Care
–Out of Hospital DNR
•Terminal Condition no longer required
•Identification Devices
•EMS requirements
•Revocation
Can a Paramedic honor an Advanced Directive
(other than a DNR)?

Specific Paramedic-Patient
Issues
•Advanced Directives & End of Life
Decisions
–Patient does not surrender rights to
receive medical care
–Comfort measures appropriate
–Provide Family support and guidance
–When in doubt, resuscitate & contact
medical control
–Termination of efforts allowed

Specific Paramedic-Patient
Issues
•Out of Hospital Death
–Initiation of care?
–Many counties and cities require:
•law enforcement response and/or
•Justice of the peace pronouncement
–Some jurisdictions use a medical
examiner or coroner system
–Required medical control authorization
–Survivors may now be the patients

Specific Paramedic-Patient
Issues
•Patient Confidentiality & Privacy
–“Medical information about a patient will
not be shared with a third party without
consent, statute, or court order”
–Not all information is protected
–In some states, QA/QI information is
not discoverable

Specific Paramedic-Patient
Issues
•Patient Confidentiality & Privacy
–Colleague & Station Talk
•Must not identify the patient
•Maintains confidentiality of specific medical
info
–Scene or Patient Photographs
–EMS Radio Dispatch & Discussions
–“Need to Know” Basis

Specific Paramedic-Patient
Issues
•Patient Confidentiality & Privacy
–You have treated & transported a 50-year-
old local salesman who is originally
diagnosed in the ED with PCP. At the
station, you discuss this case including the
name of the patient’s business. Since PCP
is associated with HIV/AIDS, your coworker
suspects this man is infected. Your
coworker discusses this case with a friend
(the patient’s employer) who then discusses
this matter with your patient (his
employee). (cont’d)

Specific Paramedic-Patient
Issues
Group Discussion: Patient
Confidentiality & Privacy
1. What are the possible consequences
for you?
2. What if the patient does not have
HIV/AIDS?

Specific Paramedic-Patient
Issues
•Patient Confidentiality & Privacy
–Defamation
•“Communication of false information
knowing the information to be false or with
reckless disregard of whether it is true or
false”
•Slander
•Libel
–Protected Classes/Diseases

Operational Issues
•Equipment failure
•Interaction with
Law Enforcement
–Crime Scenes
–Preservation of
Evidence
•Vehicle Operation
•Medical Control
•Instructor Liability
•Hospital Selection
•Dispatch
•Interfacility
Transfers
•OSHA
•Risk Management

Operational Issues
•Equipment Failure
–Product Liability
•Design flaw in ventilator
–Failure on part of owner/operator
•No backup battery for defibrillator

Operational Issues
•Interaction with Law Enforcement
–Crime Scenes
•Request law enforcement
•Await law enforcement arrival if possible
•Minimize areas of travel and contact with
scene
•Document any alterations to the scene
created by EMS personnel
•Minimize personnel within scene if possible
•Document pertinent observations

Operational Issues
•Interaction with Law Enforcement
–Evidence Preservation
•Avoid cutting through penetrations in the
clothing
•Save everything –clothing of assault victim,
items found on person, etc
•Prevent sexual assault victim from washing
•Follow sound chain of evidence procedures

Operational Issues
•Vehicle Operation
–It is 3:00 am. While responding to a
MVC, a driver fails to yield the right of
way at an intersection. The driver’s
traffic signal is green. You attempt to
stop but are unable to do so. Witnesses
state your emergency lights were on but
do not recall hearing your siren. The
driver is injured.
(cont’d)

Operational Issues
•Vehicle Operation
–What issues might the driver’s attorney
consider?
•Were all of your emergency lights really
operational? Are daily inspections
performed?
•Why was the siren not working?
•Were poorly maintained brakes responsible
for your inability to stop? What type of PM
is performed on your ambulance?
•Did you exercise due regard for the safety
of others?

Operational Issues
•Medical Control Issues
–Failure to follow med contr direction
–Following obviously harmful direction
–Implementing therapies without prior
authorization
–Following direction of an unauthorized person
–Med Contr directs EMS to an inappropriate
hospital
–The paramedic exceeds the scope of his
training or medical authorization

Operational Issues
•Instructor Liability
–Student discrimination
–Sexual harassment
–Student injury during laboratory
–Patient claim re. Failure to properly train
graduate or supervise student
–Instructors –Follow curriculum,
document student attendance &
competency

Operational Issues
•Hospital Selection
–Paramedic & Medical Control decision
–Closest & Appropriate Facility
–Written policies or guidelines
What is the closest & most appropriate facility? What does this mean?

Operational Issues
•Dispatch Issues
–Untimely dispatch
–Failure to provide responding units with
adequate directions (incorrect address)
–Dispatch of inadequate level of care
–Failure to provide pre-arrival
instructions
–Inadequate recordkeeping

Operational Issues
•Interfacility Transfer Issues
–Do you have the necessary equipment &
training?
–Should any specialized providers accompany
you?
–Do you have a patient report including history?
–Is the patient “stable”? What are the potential
complications?
–Are there any specific physician orders?
–Does the patient have a DNR order?
–Has the patient been accepted (MOT)? Who
are the transferring & accepting physicians?

Operational Issues
•OSHA & Risk Management
–OSHA generallynot applicable to government
employees
•New Texas Sharp Injury Prevention Rules
–In many States, State OSHA Rules are
applicable to nearly all
–“Each employee shall comply with occupational
safety and health standards and all rules,
regulations, and orders issued persuant to this
Act which are applicable to his own actions and
conduct”

Documentation
•Patient Confidentiality
•Securing/Sharing/Requests for
Information
•Protected Classes
•Quality & Effectiveness

Documentation
•Patient Confidentiality
–Written report only intended for those
with a need to know
–Personal identifiers may be removed for
QA/QI uses
–Patient radio reports should not contain
personal identifiers

Documentation
•Securing/Sharing/Requests for
Information
–Where are completed patient reports
stored?
–Who received the report at the ED?
–Requests for copies should be routed
through an accepted policy or an
attorney
–Does the requestor have a need to
know?

Documentation
•Protected Classes
–In some states, patient information
related to sexually transmitted diseases
or other specific diseases has become
protected as confidential
–Washington state
•Can not refer to HIV/AIDS or STD status in
report without consent
•Then, only with a clear need to know

Documentation
•Quality & Effectiveness
–Complete soon after the patient contact
–Be thorough and accurate
–Be honest, objective and factual
–Caution with abbreviations
–Maintain confidentiality
–Do not alter

Documentation
•Quality & Effectiveness
–Does your report relay to future
healthcare providers the information
you obtained regarding this patient?
–Is the information clear and concise?
–Will the report help you recall this
incident if necessary 3 years from now?
–Are you willing to sit in court with only
this document?

Summary
•There are many legal
issues surrounding the
EMS environment
•The paramedic should
attempt to keep up-to-
date with local legal
requirements
•Ignorance is not
acceptable!

Medical, Legal,
and Ethical Issues

National EMS Education
Standard Competencies (1 of
3)
Preparatory
Uses simple knowledge of the
emergency medical services (EMS)
system, safety/ well-being of the
emergency medical responder (EMR),
and medical/legal issues at the scene
of an emergency while awaiting a
higher level of care.

National EMS Education
Standard Competencies (2 of
3)
Medical/Legal and Ethics
•Consent/refusal of care
•Confidentiality
•Advance directives
•Tort and criminal actions
•Evidence preservation
•Statutory responsibilities

National EMS Education
Standard Competencies
Medical/Legal and Ethics (cont’d)
•Mandatory reporting
•Ethical principles/moral obligations
•End-of-life issues

Introduction
•Laws differ from one location to
another, so EMRs should learn the
specific laws that apply in their state
or jurisdiction.
•Do not lose sight of these concepts:
–Above all else, do no harm.
–Provide all your care in good faith.
–Provide proper consistent care, be
compassionate, and maintain your
composure.

Duty to Act (1 of 2)
•If you are employed by an agency
as an EMR and you are dispatched
to the scene of an accident or
illness, you have a duty
to act.
–You must proceed promptly to the
scene and render emergency medical
care within the limits of your training
and available equipment.

Duty to Act (2 of 2)
•Failure to
respond or
render care
leaves you and
your agency
vulnerable to
legal action.
Credit: © Corbis

Standard of Care
•The standard of care is the manner
in which you must act or behave.
•You must meet two criteria:
–You must treat the patient to the best
of your ability.
–You must provide care that a
reasonable, prudent person with similar
training would provide under similar
circumstances.

Scope of Care
•Scope of care is defined by:
–The US Department of Transportation,
Emergency Medical Responder
Educational Standards
–Medical protocols or standing orders
–Online medical direction

Ethical Responsibilities
and Competence (1 of 2)
•Treating a patient ethically means
doing so in a manner that conforms
to accepted professional standards
of conduct.
–Stay up-to-date on skills and
knowledge.
–Review your performance and assess
your techniques.
–Evaluate your response times.
–Take continuing education classes.
–Participate in quality improvement

Ethical Responsibilities
and Competence (2 of 2)
•Ethical behavior requires honesty.
–Always provide complete and correct
reports to other EMS providers.
–Never change a report except to
correct an error.

Consent for Treatment (1 of 4)
•Consent simply means giving
approval or permission.
•Expressed consent
–The patient actually lets you know—
verbally or nonverbally—that he or she
is willing to accept treatment.
–The patient must be of legal age and
able to make a rational decision.

Consent for Treatment (2 of 4)
•Implied consent
–The patient does not specifically refuse
emergency care.
–Do not hesitate to treat an unconscious
patient.
•Consent for minors
–Under the law, minors are not
considered capable of speaking for
themselves.

Consent for Treatment (3 of 4)
•Consent for
minors (cont’d)
–Emergency
treatment must wait
until a patient or
legal guardian
consents to the
treatment.
–If permission cannot
be quickly obtained,
do not hesitate to
give appropriate
medical care.

Consent for Treatment (4 of 4)
•Consent of mentally ill patients
–If the person appears to be a threat to
self or others, place this person under
medical care.
–Know your state’s legal mechanisms for
handling these patients.
–Do not hesitate to involve law
enforcement agencies.

Patient Refusal of Care (1 of 2)
•Any person who is mentally in
control has a legal right to refuse
treatment.
•Help the person understand the
consequences of refusing care by
explaining:
–The treatment
–The reason that the treatment is
needed
–The potential risks if treatment is not
provided

Patient Refusal of Care (2 of 2)
•Patient refusals should be
documented on your patient care
record according to your agency
protocols.

Advance Directives (1 of 3)
•An advance directive is a document
that specifies what a person would
like to be done if he or she becomes
unable to make his or her own
medical decisions.
•A living will
–Written document drawn up by a
patient, a physician, and a lawyer
–States the types of medical care the
person wants or wants withheld

Advance Directives (2 of 3)
•A durable power of attorney for
health care
–Allows a patient to designate another
person to make decisions about
medical care
•A do not resuscitate (DNR) order
–Written request giving permission to
medical personnel not to attempt
resuscitation in the event of cardiac
arrest

Advance Directives (3 of 3)
•If you are unable to determine if an
advance directive is legally valid,
begin appropriate medical care.
–Some states have systems in place,
such as bracelets, to identify patients
with advance directives.

Abandonment
•Abandonment occurs when a trained
person begins emergency care and
then leaves the patient before
another trained person takes over.
•Once you have started treatment,
you must continue it until a person
who has at least as much training
arrives and takes over.

Persons Dead at the Scene
(1 of 2)
•If there is any indication that a
person is alive, you should begin
providing care.
•You cannot assume a person is dead
unless one of these conditions
exists:
–Decapitation
–Rigor mortis
–Tissue decomposition
–Dependent lividity

Persons Dead at the Scene
(2 of 2)
•If any of the signs
of death are
present, consider
the patient to be
dead.
•It is important that
you know the
protocol your
department uses in
dealing with
patients who are
dead on the scene.
Credit: © Damian Dovarganese/AP Photos

Negligence
•Negligence occurs when a patient
sustains further injury or harm
because the care administered did
not meet standards.
•These conditions must be present:
–Duty to act
–Breach of duty
–Resulting injuries
–Proximate cause

Confidentiality (1 of 2)
•Most patient information is
confidential.
–Patient circumstances
–Patient history
–Assessment findings
–Patient care given
•Information should be shared only
with other medical personnel.

Confidentiality (2 of 2)
•In certain circumstances, you may
release confidential information to
designated individuals.
•Health Insurance Portability and
Accountability Act of 1996 (HIPAA)
–Strengthens laws for the protection of
the privacy of health care information
and safeguards patient confidentiality

Good Samaritan Laws
•Protect citizens from liability for
errors or omissions in giving good-
faith emergency care
•Vary considerably from state to
state
•May no longer be needed
–Provide little or no legal protection for a
rescuer or EMS provider

Regulations
•Become familiar with the federal,
state, local, and agency regulations
that affect your job.
•Certification or registration may be
required to work as an EMR.
•You are responsible for keeping
certifications or registrations
current.

Reportable Events (1 of 2)
•Reportable crimes include:
–Knife wounds
–Gunshot wounds
–Motor vehicle collisions
–Suspected child or elder abuse
–Domestic violence
–Dog bites
–Rape

Reportable Events (2 of 2)
•Learn which crimes are reportable in
your area.
•Failure to notify proper authorities of
reportable events may result in
sanctions against you or your
agency.

Crime Scene Operations (1 of
3)
•Many emergency medical situations
are also crime scenes.
•Keep these considerations in mind:
–Protect yourself.
–If you determine that a crime scene is
unsafe, wait until law enforcement
personnel give you the signal that the
scene is safe for entry.
–Your priority is patient care.

Crime Scene Operations (2 of
3)
•Considerations: (cont’d)
–When you are assessing the scene,
document anything that seems
unusual.
–Move the patient only if necessary.
–Touch only what you need to touch to
gain access to the patient.
–Preserve the crime scene for
investigation.
–Do not cut through knife or bullet holes
in the patient’s clothing.

Crime Scene Operations (3 of
3)
•Considerations:
(cont’d)
–Be careful where you
place equipment.
–Keep nonessential
people away.
–Work with the
appropriate law
enforcement
authorities on the
scene.
–Write a short report
about the incident.
Credit: © Bob Child/AP Photos

Documentation (1 of 3)
•Your documentation is the initial
account describing the patient’s
condition and the care administered.
–Serves as a legal record of your
treatment
–Provides a basis for evaluating the
quality of care provided
–Should be clear, concise, accurate, and
readable

Documentation (2 of 3)
•Documentation should include:
–Condition of the patient when found
–Patient’s description of the
injury/illness
–Patient’s initial and repeat vital signs
–Treatment you gave the patient
–Agency and personnel who took over
treatment of the patient
–Any reportable conditions present

Documentation (3 of 3)
•Documentation should include:
(cont’d)
–Any infectious disease exposure
–Anything unusual regarding the case

Summary (1 of 3)
•As an EMR, you have a duty to act
when you are dispatched on a medical
call as a part of your official duties.
•You should understand the differences
between expressed consent, implied
consent, consent for minors, consent
of mentally ill persons, and the right to
refuse care.

Summary (2 of 3)
•Advance directives give a patient
the right to have care withheld.
•You should understand the concepts
of abandonment, negligence, and
confidentiality, as well as the
purpose of Good Samaritan laws.

Summary (3 of 3)
•Certain events that deal with
contagious diseases, abuse, or
illegal acts must be reported to the
proper authorities.
•Crime scene operations are a
complex environment.

Review
1.Emergency medical responders
have the legal duty to act:
A.only when they are being
compensated by a certified agency.
B.if they witness an emergency scene
while not on duty.
C.even when outside of their response
jurisdiction.
D.if they are employed by an agency as
EMRs.

Review
Answer:
D.if they are employed by an
agency
as EMRs.

Review
2.Patients are legally able to make a
decision regarding their care if they:
A.are of legal age according to state law.
B.have injuries that are not life
threatening.
C.willingly accept transport to the
hospital.
D.have bystanders who can verify their
competency.

Review
Answer:
A.are of legal age according to
state law.

Review
3.EMRs have the ethical responsibility
to:
A.provide care only when a paramedic is
present.
B.discuss details of each case with their
coworkers and families.
C.transport all patients to the closest
hospital.
D.conform to accepted professional
standards of conduct.

Review
Answer:
D.conform to accepted
professional standards of
conduct.