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Opening Case. Case. A 15-year-old female complains of a severe headache. Upon arrival, you smell marijuana. Several teenagers tried to give the patient Tylenol. There are no adults present. Case (continued). Patient denies any trauma.
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Case • A 15-year-old female complains of a severe headache. • Upon arrival, you smell marijuana. • Several teenagers tried to give the patient Tylenol. • There are no adults present.
Case (continued) • Patient denies any trauma. • In the ambulance, she admits to taking a hit of marijuana prior to the headache. • She also tells you that she is three months pregnant and has not told her parents.
Mom and Dad arrive on scene: • Can you tell them what is going on with this patient? • Should you? • Can you or should you tell them that the patient is pregnant?
Introduction EMS is regulated at the local, state, and federal government levels Topics to be covered: • HIPAA • EMTALA • Medicare
Street Secret • It is in your best interest to know the pertinent laws and regulations that govern your practice • Ignorance of the law is never a good defense strategy
Introduction • Categories of laws that pertain to EMS • Administrative law • Civil law (torts) • Criminal law
State Laws and Regulations • The regulatory agency sets the minimum educational requirements utilized to certify EMTs at all levels • All states require that a physician oversee the quality of medical care
The Standard of Care and Scope of Practice • Standard of care • Legally explains the behaviors expected of similarly trained, competent individuals within a profession • Scope of practice • Range of skills and duties the paramedic may perform
Medical Direction and Oversight • The categories defined as • Prospective • Concurrent • Retrospective
Patient Decision-Making and Self-Determination • The principles of consent, refusal of care, and advance directives
Consent • Informed permission given by a competent patient, or the patient’s legally responsible decision-maker, for care or transportation by EMS providers • Can be expressed or implied
Consent of Minors Who can give consent • “Emancipated minor” • Legal guardian • Government with temporary custody of a child • Child welfare
Legal Representatives • Power of attorney • Agent • Legal guardians • Family members
Refusal of Care • A competent patient who is properly informed of the risks of nontreatment and the benefits of treatment is permitted to refuse medical care and/or transportation
Abandonment • Ending of paramedic-patient relationship • Before transferring care properly • Transferring care to lesser-trained person • Potential consequences
Advance Directives/DNRs • Advance directive • Health care choice if patient is incapacitated • Honored in EMS? • DNR • Do not resuscitate • How far can you go in treating the patient?
Patient Destination and Hospital Diversion Issues • Patient Destination • Patient choice of hospital • Problems with choices • Protocols about special situation patients • Diversion Issues • What is it? • Frequency • EMTALA
Privacy and Confidentiality • HIPAA—The Health Insurance Portability and Accountability Act • PHI or Protected Health Information • What is considered PHI? • When can it be discussed?
Negligence • The failure to act as a reasonably prudent and careful person would act under similar circumstances
Negligence Four elements required to prove negligence: • Duty to act existed • Breach of duty occurred • Damages resulted • Damages caused by breach of duty
Duty • What defines duty? • Legal relationship formed when dispatched
Breach of Duty • Paramedic must be found to have violated a legal duty to the patient • Breached the standard of care
Standard of Care Breach • Failure to do what a similar, reasonably prudent paramedic would do under similar circumstances. • Evidence of the standard of care comes from: • Protocols or applicable policies or procedures • National standard curriculum • EMS textbooks
Damages (Harm or Injury) • Definition • Harm or losses sustained • What can be awarded if it is found true?
Causation • Prove the provider’s breach caused the damage
Intentional Torts • The defendant meant to cause the harmful action • Most common types of intentional torts: • Assault • Battery • False imprisonment • Defamation
Immunity Laws • Immunity • Offers protection • Must act in good faith • Good Samaritan laws vary from state to state • “Professional liability” insurance
Criminal Law • Types of criminal cases EMS are becoming involved in: • Ambulance crashes • Drug abuse/addiction
Reporting Requirements • Some situations that typically require additional reporting requirements include: • Violent actions against others • Discriminatory or harassing behaviors • Suspicion of communicable infections or sexually transmitted diseases
Reporting Requirements • Situations requiring additional reporting: • Criminal activity • Perceived threats to homeland security • Animal attacks and bites
Use of Restraints • When this can occur • What are the potential implications in placing restraints?
Summary • Laws govern EMS providers like all other professions • Any person who plans to work as an EMS provider or paramedic should make themselves aware of laws that govern the profession