Title: Top Priority: The Patient
1Chapter 2
2Learning Objectives
- The healthcare professional, both as a
professional and as a healthcare consumer. - RED respect, empathy, and dignity.
- The Patients Bill of Rights.
- The healthcare provider-patient relationship
(including contracts and consent). - Handling transference (boundaries).
- The healthcare consumer.
- Reasons a patient could be released from care.
3Key Terms
- Consent Informed consent
- Contract of care (or express consent)
- Countertransference Noncompliance
- Dignity Patient Care Partnership
- Empathy Patients Bill of Rights
- Good Samaritan Law Respect
- Healthcare Consumer Standard of Care
- Implied Consent Transference
4Establishing Ethical Standards
- Dr. William Mayo, founder of the Mayo Clinic
upheld that the best interest of the patient is
the only interest to be considered and that a
patient should be treated as a whole. - Seeing the patient as an individual is essential
in performing healthcare services to the highest
standards no patient, no health care.
5Establishing Ethical Standards cont
- A foundation of trust should exist in every
healthcare provider-patient relationship. - To foster ethical trust, healthcare providers
must hold themselves to the highest ethical
standards. - Examples of ethical standards do not let an
external influence, such as a drug
representative, compromise the patients best
interest do not waste resources (e.g., overusing
supplies) or withhold needed items of care.
6Seeing RED Respect, Empathy, and Dignity in
Health Care
- It is professionally wise and ethically sound for
the healthcare professional to put the patient
first by providing the best care, regardless of
the patients appearance, economics, or beliefs. - Ethical professionalism revolves around treating
the patient with respect, empathy, and dignity.
7Seeing RED Respect, Empathy, and Dignity in
Health Care cont
- The highest standard of professionalism involves
maintaining a spirit of helpfulness, knowledge,
and regard for the patients condition, always
showing empathy and concern, with the patients
best interest being the top priority - Empathy treating a patient as you would ant to
be treated understanding the patients needs
fosters the trait of empathy.
8Seeing RED Respect, Empathy, and Dignity in
Health Care cont
- Respect respecting someone is to show that
person attention and regard the persons
feelings. - Dignity showing a patient respect empowers that
person to feel dignity dignity arises from
another person showing you regard. This is
especially an issue in vulnerable populations
like the elderly.
9The Healthcare Consumer
- The healthcare professional experiences two
roles, that of provider and that of consumer. - Anyone seeking professional care or treatment for
health is a healthcare consumer. - Healthcare facilities deal with two sensitive
issues the patients health and money. - Healthcare is expensive, so healthcare consumers
rightfully expect the highest standard of care.
10Ethical Considerations in healthcare
Provider-Patient Relationships
- The highest standard of care requires giving
attention to a patient that would reasonably be
given to anyone in a similar situation. - There are guidelines for appropriate professional
behavior dealing with these areas - Fostering trust. Listening without judging.
- Patient undressing. Respecting boundaries.
- Appropriate language. Sexual or other contact.
- Intimate examinations. Avoiding promises.
11Transference
- Transference occurs when a patient retains
feelings or attitudes associated with childhood
which may surface during treatment and be
transferred onto the healthcare provider. - Counter-transference occurs when the provider
experiences feelings for the patient that are out
of the norm, such as anger. - The primary responsibility for honoring the
provider-patient relationship boundaries is in
the hands of the healthcare provider.
12Contracts and Consent
- The healthcare provider-patient relationship is a
type of contract. - A contract of care is an agreement that creates a
relationship where the healthcare provider is to
provide care to the patient. - Consent is a patients agreement to treatment.
This consent can be informed or implied.
13Contracts and Consent cont
- Informed consent this occurs when a provider
explains the treatment or procedure and the
patient or patient representative agrees. This
form of consent can be verbal but is usually
written in a signed consent form. - Another term for informed consent is express
consent.
14Contracts and Consent cont
- Implied consent occurs when a patients behavior
suggests compliance (e.g. rolling up a shirt
sleeve when the nurse arrives to administer a
shot). - In emergency situations consent by accident
victims is considered to be implied.
15Contracts and Consent cont
- In emergency situations, the Good Samaritan law
protects the provider from being sued when
performing medical care in good faith. Every
state in the U.S. has some version of this.
16Can a Physician Fire a Patient?
- A provider has a right to release a patient. In
June 1996, the American Medical Association (AMA)
issued Opinion 8.115 Termination of the
Physician-Patient Relationship. Notice must be
given to the patient or patients representative
sufficiently in advance to permit a replacement.
17Can a Physician Fire a Patient? Cont
- Patients may be dismissed by a provider due to
noncompliance (not following the providers
advice), insurance plan participation, failure to
keep appointments, and nonpayment for services.
18The Patient Care Partnership
- The American Hospital Association (AHA) developed
the Patients Bill of Rights in 1973, which was
revised in 1992, and then replaced in 2003 with
the Patient Care Partnership. - This document is a guide for patients to
understand their rights and responsibilities when
receiving care during a hospital stay. - This document also addresses financial aspects of
patient care, confidentiality, and patient
choices in their own medical care.
19Putting It All Together
- Healthcare professionals must always be mindful
that if there is no patient there can be no
health care and that the patients best interest
must always prevail. - The patient has certain rights, including
respect, empathy, and dignity (RED). - Patient rights can be reviewed in the U.S.
Governments Patients Bill of Rights under the
2010 Affordable Care Act. These rights empower
the consumer to receive the highest standard of
care via appropriate consent and contract.
20Chapter Checkup
- Fill-in-the-Blank.
- 1p30 2p30 3p30 4p22,32.
- In Your Own Words.
- 1pp.23-24 2p25.
- Multiple Choice.
- 132p 228p.