July 22, 2021
As a medical worker, you are responsible for the health and safety of everyone in your care. That includes providing medical treatment to patients, protecting them from harm, and ensuring they are treated with dignity. However, medical workers face several legal issues that can be difficult to navigate on their own. Medical workers are often at risk of being accused of medical negligence.
If you work in a hospital, clinic, or doctor's office and have a patient file suit against you for medical negligence, you must know the steps to protect yourself. This blog post will give you some information about protecting yourself legally as a medical worker so you can make sure the book does everything!
What Are the Risks of Being a Medical Worker?
The recent pandemic exposed the ugly battles that healthcare workers need to face. Medical workers are at risk of physical harm by the patients and their loved ones. They can be sued for medical malpractice or may take on a dangerous infection from the patient they treat. Medical personnel may be traumatized by seeing a traumatic injury or illness in their patient.
Medical practitioners might make an incorrect judgment call on what treatment is appropriate for a patient's condition when other treatments could have worked just as well, leading to them facing a legal consequence. You can reduce this risk by being careful with your medical decisions and treatment plans. This will help you avoid making an incorrect judgment call on what would work best for a patient or deciding on surgery without knowing how difficult it will be.
How to Protect Yourself?
Medical workers should have personal liability insurance that protects them from medical malpractice and other risks they face as medical workers such as physical harm, property damage, etc. - The hospital where the medical professional works should provide some form of protection like an Employee Assistance Program (EAP) which helps staff with mental health issues/trauma that results from exposure to occupational stressors while on the job, legal services, etc. Research about the appropriate medical malpractice insurance for your region. You can have some form of liability insurance against medical malpractice. This can come either from your policy or the one provided by your employer.
Medical workers are also entitled to certain legal rights, such as access to medical records. Medical professionals should request that patients sign authorization forms if they want copies of any documents related to the treatment plan. 'Medical Workers' Rights: The Right To Request Accessibility under the OCH Act, which aims to safeguard the healthcare workers and offer them an opportunity for a fair trial.
Research About Your Rights
Medical professionals should report abuse or neglect. As a healthcare professional, you can get a restraining order for protection from an abuser. If you are in imminent danger of being abused by that person, you should talk to their employer about personal safety measures they can take. This includes wearing body armor and having panic buttons installed. These will cost hospitals money but are worth it because it helps protect staff.
Report When in Doubt
Staff should report abuse or neglect. When medical personnel witnesses an act of medical negligence, they can file a complaint with the appropriate agency like the federal government's Office for Civil Rights (OCR). Medical professionals have some responsibility when it comes to caring for patients and their families. Medical workers are responsible for reporting any legal violations they witness while on staff at a healthcare facility, such as physical harm, medical malpractice, etc.
If there is imminent danger from someone, you must contact your employer about ways to protect yourself. This includes wearing body armor and having panic buttons installed so that active measures can be taken in violence against medical employees. Remember that reporting perpetrators would not just keep you safe, but would protect your peers too.
Understand HIPAA Regulations
Medical professionals are responsible for reporting medical violations they witness, like physical harm or medical malpractice. You must be aware of HIPAA regulations when posting to social media sites so that you do not release any sensitive patient information in the public domain. Education and prevention are key when it comes to medical privacy laws. Medical personnel should have a basic understanding of how their actions may affect patient confidentiality before posting about them on personal blogs or other forms of social media. For instance, if someone posts pictures from an ER visit, it could show identifying features that violate health regulation rules such as HIPAA Privacy Standards found at 45 CFR Part 160 Subpart A (160.101).
The same would apply to medical workers who post videos about patients on an active medical unit. Suppose medical professionals want to blog about medical issues. In that case, they should be aware that their posts may violate patient confidentiality and are responsible for understanding the specific rules of the law to avoid any conflict. Medical professionals need to understand how HIPAA regulations affect social media use to protect private information from being released publicly on sites such as Twitter or Facebook. Medical personnel need to assess whether posting medical information on social media is worth the risk of violating medical privacy laws before doing so with full knowledge that this action might have.
Medical professionals are often exposed to high levels of stress and emotional trauma on the job. They need to be aware of their rights and any legal obligations they might have to protect themselves from lawsuits or disciplinary action.
HIPAA regulations, which were established by the Health Insurance Portability and Accountability Act (HIPAA), require medical workers to keep confidential all information about their patients shared with you during treatment. Suppose a patient asks you not to share something they revealed in confidence with another individual. In that case, it is your duty under law - even if doing so means breaking confidentiality rules set out by an employer-to-employee contract.
So, if you make sure you do everything according to regulations you wouldn’t have to worry about getting into trouble.