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Injury Care and the Athletic Trainer. Chapter 1. Sports Medicine vs. Athletic Training?. NATA vs. BOC. National Athletic Trainers’ Association (NATA) Establishes standards for professionalism, education, research, and practice settings
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Injury Care and the Athletic Trainer Chapter 1
Sports Medicine vs. Athletic Training?
NATA vs. BOC • National Athletic Trainers’ Association (NATA) • Establishes standards for professionalism, education, research, and practice settings • Entry-Level Athletic Training Clinical Proficiencies • Code of Ethics • Board of Certification (BOC) • Awards the ATC credential • Role Delineation Study • Standards of Professional Practice
ATC • Domains • Injury/illness prevention and wellness protection • Clinical evaluation and diagnosis • Immediate and emergency care
ATC (cont.) • Domains • Treatment and rehabilitation • Organization and professional health and well-being
Athletic Training Education • Commission on Accreditation of Athletic Training Education (CAATE)
State Practice Governance • Licensure • Certification • Registration
Work Settings • High school and collegiate settings • Professional sports teams • Sports medicine clinics • Industrial/occupational settings • Physician practices
Team Approach to Health Care • Team physician • Primary care physician • Participant • Physical therapist • Strength and conditioning specialist • Additional specialists
Legal Considerations • Practice of athletic training normally tried under tort law • Tort • Omission • Commission • Standard of care vs. scope of care • Clearance for participation • Final authority is supervising team physician, not ATC
Legal Considerations (cont.) • Negligence • Failure to provide a duty of care • Negligent torts can result from • Malfeasance • Misfeasance • Nonfeasance • Malpractice • Gross negligence • Criteria required to prove negligence
Legal Liabilities • Failure to Warn • Participants must be informed that risk for injury exists and understand the nature of that risk • Foreseeability of Harm • Recognizing a potential danger and removing the danger before an injury occurs
Legal Liabilities (cont.) • Informed Consent • Injured party has been reasonably informed of needed treatment, possible alternative treatment, and advantages and disadvantages of each course of action • Exclusionary clause – identify conditions not treated by the ATC • Obtain prior to any treatment • Potential for battery
Legal Liabilities (cont.) • Refusing help • Individuals have the right to refuse treatment • Exception: increased risk for further injury • Product liability • Implied warranty • Expressed warranty • Strict liability • NOCSAE • Confidentiality • Right to privacy
Legal Defenses • Assumption of risk • Individual acknowledges understanding of the risks of their participation in the activity and voluntarily chooses to participate, assuming all risks of injury or even death due to their participation
Legal Defenses (cont.) • Good Samaritan laws • Conditions vary from state to state, but immunity generally applies only when emergency first aider: • Acts during an emergency • Acts in good faith • Acts without expected compensation • Is not guilty of misconduct or gross negligence • Comparative negligence • Relative degree of negligence • Damages awarded on a proportionate basis
Preventing Litigation • Understand and complete duty of care • Steps to reduce risk of litigation • Know NATA position and consensus statements