PVR Legal and Ethical Issues

40 cards   |   Total Attempts: 183
  

Cards In This Set

Front Back
Patient self-determination act
- any institution that receives federal funds must inform clients of the availability of Advance Directives and determine if the client has such directives
Willful violation of Advance Directives
Can lead to criminal prosecution
ex: DNR and force upon them can lead to criminal prosecution
Health care workers who follow Advance Directives in good faith
Are immune to liability
do what you really believe they meant
ex: DNR- no wrist bands
Advance Directives
- what is in one state may not be valid in another state
- once admitted into an institution, Advance Directives must be implemented by the physician (written as an order)
- DNR order cannot be a verbal order
- A phone order can be taken if 2 nurses witness it, the physician must sign the order ASAP
- In PA, client has the legal right to refuse/avoid medical treatment, including artificial nutrition/hydration
- must be clear and convincing evidence of the client's intent to refuse
Types of Advance Directives
living wills
- should be written & signed by the client and witness
- should list specific treatments not wanted
- many have the inherent flaw of speaking only of terminal illnes, not addressing the issue of persisitent vegetative state
- many have the inherent flaw of speaking only of initiating treatment, not addressing withdrawl of ongoing treatment
- should address artificial nutrition/hydration
Power of attorney
- does not survive competence
Durable power of attorney
- survives competence (necessary for health care decisions) aka health care proxy
- durable power of attorney authorizes a specified agent to do things which a Living Will does not (can authorize release of institution from liability, waiver of doctor/patient privilege)
Wills
- many institutions have regulations and policies about witnessing wills
- may be written or oral
- person must be a sound mind/competent
- PA requires two witnesses
- witness need not know the contents
- witness signature is attesting to the competence of the person and to the signature
Code of ethics
- standards devised for a profession, addressing a code of behaviors for its members
- involves rules of good conduct which reflect the highest ideals of the group
- a nurse's actions are guided by a code of ethcs and by laws addressing patient care issues
Statutory law (public law)
- laws enacted by legislative bodies such as county, city council, state legislature, federal legislature
ex: nurse practice act passed by state legislature
- rules and regulations established by governmental agencies such as licensing boards and regulatory boards
ex: state board of nursing (function as administrators of laws governing nursing)
Common law (private law)
-derived from judicial decision and court rulings
ex: contracts (implied, written, oral)
- law of torts (negligence, false imprisonment, consent, defamation of character, fraud, assault and battery)
Both statutory and common law
- can be subdivided into civil and criminal components, both with legal implications
Criminal law
Laws that affect the public welfare as a whole.
- a violation is called a crime (crime against society)
Civil law
Laws that regulateconduct between private individuals or businesses
- a violation is called a tort. can be intentional/unintentional (crimes against an individual)
Negligence
- unintentional tort
- results when a person fails to conduct him/herself in a reasonable and prudent manner
- not synonymous with carelessness
- it is failure to exercise the degree of care that a person of reasonable intelligence and prudence would exercise under similar circumstances