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Learn about Indian health legislations, Consumer Protection Act, physician do’s and don’ts, and Registration of Births and Deaths Act.
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Legislation (Statutory law) • Enacted by a legislature or other governing body or the process of making it • Before an item of legislation becomes law - Bill • Legislation can have many purposes: to regulate, to authorize, to outlaw, to provide (funds), to sanction, to grant, to declare or to restrict
Need for legislations • Indian constitution - provisions for the protection, and promotion of every individual/ group/ vulnerable population w.r.t. health and nutrition • Public health also depends on law and science • Provision of legal action against those trying to jeopardize the health of the people
Categories of Health Legislations • To improve and maintain high standards in the medical education and services • Public registration to assess mortality and enumeration of population • To prevent public health problems • To achieve maternal health and to empower women • To safe guard the children and young • To rehabilitate and provide equal opportunity to disabled and disadvantaged groups
Categories of Health Legislations • To prevent drug addiction, substance abuse and safe manufacturing of drugs, distribution and storage • To protect workers and to provide social security • Environmental legislations • To promote voluntary work
The Indian Medical Council Act, 1956; (Professional Conduct & Ethics) Regulations, 2002 • MCI has exclusive right to grant recognition to medical colleges • Registered medical practitioners under MCI are entitled to practice Allopathic system of medicine • Made regulations for standards of professional conduct, etiquette and code of ethics • Describes about the entry of names in the register, removal, restoration and maintenance of registers
Consumer Protection Act (CPA) 1986 7 Rights of consumers • Right to safety • Right to be informed • Right to choose • Right to be heard • Right to seek redressal • Right to consumer education • Right to clean and healthy environment
CPA and Medical Profession • Who is a consumer? • Doctor-patient relationship is a contract for a personal service • Not a master-servant relationship
Do’s for Doctors • Mention your qualifications/ training/ experience/ designation on the prescription • Always mention date and timing of the consultation • Mention age and sex of the patient • In a pediatric prescription, weight of the patient must also be mentioned
Do’s for Doctors • Always face the patient. Do not stare, especially female patients • Ask the patient to come back for review on the next day, if you are not sure about the diagnosis/ treatment • Mention “diagnosis under review” until the • diagnosis is finally settled • Record history of drug allergy • Write names of drugs clearly. Use correct dosages
Do’s for Doctors • Whenever referring a patient, provide him with a referring note • Update your (and your staff’s) knowledge and skill from time to time • Preferably employ qualified assistants
Don'ts for Doctors • Don’t prescribe without examining the patient • Don’t examine a patient when you are under influence of alcohol or any intoxicated substance • When you are not sure what and why to do, consult your senior/ specialist/ colleague • Don’t refuse the patient’s right to know about the hospital rules, regulations and hospital charges
Don'ts for Doctors • Don’t refuse if the patient/ attendants want to leave against medical advice. Document this properly • Don’t issue death or medical certificates unless you have yourself verified it • Don’t divulge secrets you come to know during discharge of your professional duties. • Don’t deny medical care to a patient with HIV infection/ AIDS. Observe all necessary precautions
The Registration of Births and Deaths Act, 1969 • “birth” means live-birth or still-birth • “death” means the permanent disappearance of all evidence of life at any time after live-birth has taken place
The Registration of Births and Deaths Act,1969 • To be registered within 21 days after births or deaths • Delayed registration within 1month on payment of fees • After thirty days but within one year - registered only with the written permission of the prescribed authority and on payment of the prescribed fee and production of an affidavit • After one year registration is made only on an order made by a Magistrate or a class one officer after verifying the correctness of the birth or death and on payment of the prescribed fee
The Registration of Births and Deaths Act,1969 • Provides for medical certification of death • Medical practitioner who has attended the deceased during his last breath or illness has to certify the cause of death in a prescribed format
The Medical Termination of Pregnancy Act, 1971 Conditions when abortions can be done • Therapeutic • Social • Humanitarian • Eugenic reasons • Not mentally sound
The Medical Termination of Pregnancy Act, 1971 • Person who can conduct MTP • Place where MTP can be done • MTP Rules 2003 • Committee at the district level • 20 weeks Vs 12 weeks • Informed Consent • Use of Misoprostol
The Maternity Benefit Act 1961 • Every women is entitled to payment of maternity benefit at the rate of average daily wage for the period of 6 weeks before and after delivery • In case of miscarriage or MTP leave with pay for 6 weeks • After tubectomy- leave for a period of 2 weeks • Recent Bill in parliament?? Penalties • Imprisonment for 3 months to 1 year or fine of Rs 2000 to Rs 5000 or both
The Pre-Conception and Pre-Natal diagnostic Techniques (Prohibition of Sex Selection) Act 1994 • To prohibit sex selection before and after conception and for regulation of pre-natal diagnostic techniques • Guidelines for doing prenatal diagnostic techniques use • Laboratories where the Prenatal diagnostic techniques are used to be registered
PNDT Act 1994 • Regulation of Genetic Counseling Centres, Genetic Laboratories and Genetic Clinics • Regulation of pre-natal diagnostic techniques • Written consent of pregnant woman and prohibition of communicating the sex of foetus • Determination of sex prohibited • Constitution of Central Supervisory Board
PNDT Act 1994 Penalties • Imprisonment upto 3 years and fine upto Rs 10000 • Subsequent conviction, 3-5 years imprisonment and fine of Rs 50000 • Removal of the name of the doctor from the register for 2 years for the first offence and permanently for the subequent offence
The Cigarettes and Other Tobacco Products(Prohibition of Advertisement and Regulation of Trade and Commerce, Production, Supplyand Distribution) Act, 2003 • COTPA
COTPA 2003 • No person shall advertise, shall cause to advertise, shall take part to advertise directly or indirectly any tobacco product for consumption or use • Sale of tobacco products to less than 18 years old not allowed • Sale of tobacco products not allowed in an area within the radius of one hundred yards of any educational institution
COTPA 2003 • Every package of the tobacco product should have label, pictorial representation of skull and cross bones and warnings • Smoking in public places - Rs 200 • Sale to less than 18 years old - Rs 200 • First conviction be punishable with imprisonment up to one year, or with fine which may extend to one thousand rupees or with both