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Prehospital Medical-Legal Issues. Amy Gutman MD prehospitalmd@gmail.com. Outline. Responsibilities ~ Legal, Ethical, Moral Overview of the Legal System Specific Laws Accountability & Malpractice Specific Paramedic-Patient Issues Operational Issues Documentation. Responsibilities.
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PrehospitalMedical-Legal Issues Amy Gutman MD prehospitalmd@gmail.com
Outline • Responsibilities ~ Legal, Ethical, Moral • Overview of the Legal System • Specific Laws • Accountability & Malpractice • Specific Paramedic-Patient Issues • Operational Issues • Documentation
Responsibilities • Legal Responsibilities • Established by the law-making bodies of government • i.e. DUI, Homicide • Ethical Standards • Principles of conduct identified by members of a group or profession • i.e. “First do no harm” • Individual Morality • Individual’s assessment of right & wrong • i.e. “right-to-life”
Legal System • Law • Constitutional • Common • Legislative • Administrative • EMS most affected by legislative & administrative laws
Court Systems • Federal • Most powerful and widest-reaching • i.e. “Constitutional Law” • State • Can be overridden by Federal law • i.e. “same-sex” marriage over-turned by US courts • Criminal • Illegal acts; can be state or federal • i.e. breaking & entering • Civil • i.e. divorce law
Terminology • Plaintiff • Person bringing lawsuit • Defendant • Person answering charges/ lawsuit • Discovery • Deposition • Interrogation • Documentation • Appeal • Bringing case to higher court when court’s decision is questioned
EMS-Specific Laws • Scope of Practice • Direct vs Indirect Medical Direction • “Intervener” physician • Ability to Practice • Certification vs Licensure • Authorization to Practice
Other Laws • Motor Vehicle • Infectious Disease Exposure • Assault against Public Safety Officer • Obstruction of Duty • Good Samaritan Law
Domestic violence Child & Elder Abuse Criminal Acts GSW, Stabbing & Assault Animal Bites Communicable Diseases Out of hospital deaths Possession of Controlled Substances Mandatory Reporting
Accountability & Malpractice • Standard of Care • Negligence • Civil Litigation • Borrowed Servant Doctrine • Civil Rights • Off-Duty Liability
Standard of Care • “Expected care, skill, & judgment under similar circumstances by a similarly trained, reasonable paramedic.” • Established nationally, regionally, locally • Documentation demonstrating standard of care will save your butt!
Negligence • “Deviation from accepted or expected standards of care expected to protect from unreasonable risk of harm.” • To prove: • Did not act when there was a Duty to Act • Breach of duty • Damage or harm resulted from health care provider’s actions • Proximate cause
Civil Cases • Proof of guilt from “preponderance of evidence” • “Res Ipsa Loquitur” • Burden of proof shifts to the defendant • Simple vs. Gross Negligence
Defenses • Good Samaritan Law • Government Employees Immunity • CIA, FBI…not so much Fire Personnel (sorry) • Statue of Limitations • Contributory Negligence
Accountability & Malpractice • How do these affect the your Practice? • Borrowed Servant Doctrine • Patient Civil Rights • Liability when Off-Duty
Consent Refusals Restraint Abandonment Transfer of Care Advance Directives End of Life Decisions Out of Hospital Death Confidentiality Privacy Paramedic-Patient Issues
Consent • Patient has legal & mental capacity • Any suggestion of AMS negates capacity • Patient understands consequences • Types: • Informed • Expressed • Implied
Consent Issues • Minors • Who is an “Emancipated Minor” in Ohio? • Prisoners • Mental Retardation • Mental Health Disease
Refusals • Consent for transport vs treatment • Withdrawl of Consent • Refusal of Service must ALWAYS document with witness: • Legal & mental capacity • Is informed of risks & benefits • Offer alternatives
Who Cannot Refuse Care? • Unable to understand nature & consequences of injury or illness • Unable to make rational decisions regarding medical care due to physical or mental conditions • Danger to self &/ or others • Do not assume incompetence unless obvious • Politicians aside…and then it is generally obvious!
Restraints • Prepare to spend a whole lot of time documenting • Always have a law enforcement report as a “witness” to your report • Does not provide authorization to harm! Risk being charged with: • Assault • Battery • False Imprisonment • Patients under arrest can refuse treatment & transport unless condition exists preventing them from making a rational decision
Restraints • Involve Law Enforcement early • Have a plan of action • Ensure safety of all • Reasonable force • Physical & chemical restraints • Document well
Patient Abandonment • Unilateral termination of patient-provider relationship when still required & / or desired by one party • Exceptions • MCI • Risks to well-being
Transfer of Patient Care • Transfer of Care to other Providers • Transfer of Care at the ED
Advanced Directives & End of Life Decisions • Advanced Directive • Out of Hospital DNR • Living Will • Durable Power of Attorney for Health Care • Patient Self-Determination Act
Important Points About End of Life Decisions • Not a surrender of rights to receive medical care • Comfort measures appropriate • Provide Family support and guidance • When in doubt, resuscitate & contact medical control • Termination of efforts allowed
Out of Hospital Death • Initiation of care? • Some states & regions require: • Law enforcement response • Justice of the peace, medical examiner or coroner pronouncement • Requires medical control • Survivors/ family may become patients
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 most States, QA/QI is not discoverable
Patient Confidentiality & Privacy • Colleague & Station Chat • Cannot identify the patient & must maintain confidentiality of specific medical information • Scene or Patient Photographs • ? Cell phones • ? Media • EMS Radio Dispatch & Discussions
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
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 • i.e. ventilator design flaw • Failure on part of owner/operator • No backup battery for defibrillator
Crime Scenes • Request law enforcement & await their arrival • Minimize personnel & their scene contact • Document alterations to scene created by EMS • Document pertinent observations
Evidence Preservation • Avoid cutting through penetrations in the clothing • Save everything found on victim • Do no discourage sexual assault patient from washing • Can be considered “coercion” • Chain of evidence procedures • i.e. document turnover of possessions
Vehicle Operation • The greatest source of EMS-related law-suits • The greatest percentages of wins for the plaintiff and/ or EMS “settlements”
Vehicle Operation – Case Study • While responding to a MVC at 0300, 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 causing injury to the driver • Witnesses state your emergency lights were on but do not recall hearing your siren
Issues For The Driver’s Attorney • Were 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 maintenance is performed on your ambulance? • Did you exercise due regard for the safety of others? • Historical investigation as well
Medical Control Issues • Failure to follow medical control • Following harmful medical control direction • Includes Medical Control directing EMS to inappropriate hospital • Includes Following direction of unauthorized person • Implementing therapies without prior authorization • The paramedic exceeds the scope of his training or medical authorization
Instructor Liability • Discrimination • Sexual harassment • Student injury • Failure to properly train graduate or supervise student • Best defense: • Follow curriculum • Document attendance • Document competency
Hospital Selection • Paramedic & Medical Control decision • Closest vs “Most Appropriate” Facility • Written policies or guidelines
Dispatch • Untimely dispatch • Untimely response • Failure to provide correct address • Dispatch of inadequate level of care • Failure to provide pre-arrival instructions • Inadequate recordkeeping
Interfacility Transfer • Appropriate equipment & training? • Travel with specialized providers? • Printed patient report? • Is patient “stable”? • Potential complications with decompensation? • Are there any specific physician orders? • Has the patient been accepted? • Documented and confirmed transferring & accepting physicians?
OSHA & Risk Management • If you live & work in an OSHA-regulated State… • “Each employee shall comply with occupational safety and health standards and all rules, regulations, & orders issued pursuant to this Act which are applicable to his own actions and conduct”
Documentation “The shitstorm that can bury you, or the lifeline that will save you”
Documentation • Confidentiality • Security • Sharing • QA, research, M & M • Protected Classes • Quality & Effectiveness
Confidentiality • Written report intended only for those with need to know • Personal identifiers generally removed for QA/QI • Radio reports should never contain personal identifiers • Including terms like “frequent flyer”
Securing & Sharing Information • Where are patient reports stored? • Who receives the report at the ED? • Requests for copies must be routed through an accepted policy or an attorney • Does requestor have a need to know? • No, No, No!: Media • Yes: Patient, Family on behalf of patient, Lawyers, Insurance/ billing companies (sometimes)
Protected Classes • Some specific disease information is considered confidential in a PCR • Tuberculosis • HIV/ AIDS/ STDs • “Mandatory Reporting” is an issue for hospitals
Quality Documentation • Complete immediately after the patient contact • Be thorough, accurate, honest, objective & factual • Caution with abbreviations • Maintain confidentiality • Do not alter once written down • May always add an addendum
Important Points • Does your chart tell an accurate story relating the events that happened in a clear, concise format? • 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? • Your PCR can be “called” into court without you!