Learning Objectives
After completing this course you will be able to:
- Describe the importance of obtaining proper consent from the patient prior to undergoing any procedure.
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- Define proximate cause in the context of medical malpractice.
- Describe two essential elements that constitute a conduct which becomes the proximate cause of an injury.
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- Describe what “a chance of survival” means in medical negligence cases.
- Describe the importance of reading and following patient progress charts and specific instructions of treatment.
- Describe conduct that would constitute sexual harassment in workplace.
- Describe the interrelationship between the standard of care and medical malpractice.
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- Describe how faulty recordkeeping can lead to a finding of medical malpractice.
- Explain major pitfalls of charting by exception.
- List 3 essential elements to establish a prima facie case of medical malpractice.
- Describe the importance of reading and following employee handbook, and the policies and procedures of the hospital.
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- Describe the 3 essential elements of medical malpractice.
- Explain the importance of effectively communicating orders to assigned caregivers.
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- Describe 3 elements of conduct that accord official immunity protection to public employees from liability.
- Differentiate between “ministerial” acts and “discretionary” acts of government employees.
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- Explain the nursing code as it relates to the revocation of a nursing license, if the licensee is unfit or incompetent due to the use of alcohol.
- Describe 4 acts that would lead to the revocation of a nursing license.
- Define public policy and list 4 elements that describe the duties of a professional registered nurse in the context of public policy.
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- Differentiate between ordinary negligence and medical malpractice.
- Explain the consequences of unauthorized disclosure of patient records.
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- Define the term battery in a medical setting.
- Describe wrongful death and wrongful living as they apply to legal liability for medical professionals.
- Explain the principle of estoppel.
- Explain how the constitution protects professional medical personnel when they speak out upon matters of public concern.
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- Differentiate between professional ethics and personal moral convictions as they relate to the duties of a nurse.
- Explain the ANA code for nurses as it relates to a nurse’s refusal to treat patients.
- Explain the duties of a health care worker in protecting the public from the actions of a mental patient under care.
- Explain the significance of proper charting to avoid claims of medical malpractice.
- List 8 circumstances that determine the status of a worker as an employee as against an independent contractor.
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- Define vicarious liability.
- List 4 factors that would determine whether an employer is liable for the acts of an employee.
- Describe how Good Samaritan statutes protect health care workers when they render treatment to an individual in an emergency.
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- Describe how worker’s compensation laws protect a worker in the event of an injury in the course of employment.
- List 4 exceptions to the “going and coming” rule as applied to worker’s compensation.
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- Define the “captain-of-the-ship” doctrine.
- Describe the circumstances that would determine whether a nurse works for the hospital or for the physician.
- Explain how proper charting could exonerate health care providers from medical malpractice.
- Describe the responsibilities of a nurse to comply with the floating policy of a hospital.
- Describe the rights of an employee against termination without just cause.
- Describe how proper communication with a patient could avoid legal liability for the hospital.
- Describe how the law protects health care providers from legal liability when they follow from the various recognized methods of treatment.
- Explain the recommended course of action for a nurse when she observes a doctor doing something improper, something that is against the policies and rules of the hospital.
- Define the legal principle of the statutes of limitations.
- Explain how a hospital has a duty to make its equipment and premises safe for patients.
- Explain the Uniform Anatomical Gift Act and list the classes of persons authorized to give consent in behalf of the decedent for donation of organs.
- Describe the importance of providing a specially trained professional nurse to supervise for patient care.
- Describe how the worker’s compensation law applies to a situation where a worker gets injured away from the workplace.
- Explain how the Civil Rights Act of 1964 (Title VII) protects a pregnant nurse against sexual discrimination.
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- Explain how AFP testing is used to detect spina bifida.
- Describe the significance of obtaining informed consent and recording the consent in proper forms to avoid claim of medical malpractice.
- Differentiate between the nursing services rendered by a nurse as opposed to the services rendered to a nurse, and their importance in protecting the privacy of a nurse.
- Explain how Title VII prohibits discrimination in employment based on race, color, sex, religion or national origin.
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- Define the tort of retaliatory discharge.
- Describe how the law treats moral convictions when they come to interfere in the discharge of nursing duties.
- Define extreme and outrageous conduct.
- Explain the notice requirements upon the occurrence of an injury with regards to worker’s compensation law.
- Define the responsibilities of the emergency department in a hospital with respect to patients who are in need of medical service but are unable to pay for them immediately.
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- Define foreseeable harm.
- List 2 factors that impose duty on a health care provider to control the conduct of a third person to prevent injury to patients.
Table of Contents
- Informed Consent: Patient Did Not Ask, Doctor Did Not Tell
- Proximate Cause: Nurse Uses Rubber Catheter on a Pregnant Patient Allergic to Rubber
- Loss of Chance: Nurses Leave Patient in Distress
- U.S. Supreme Court Defines Sexual Harassment
- Nursing-Home Negligence: Patient Chokes on Food
- Charting By Exception: Conservative Treatment Before Resorting to Surgery
- Nurse Claims Hospital Should Have Disciplined Her Progressively
- Nurse Fails to Spot Inconsistent Physicians’ Instructions
- Court Turns Down Paramedics’ Assertion of Governmental Immunity
- “Qualified and Talented” Nurse Falls Victim to Alcohol Abuse
- Nurse Terminated For Refusing to “Stay Out Of It”
- Unauthorized Disclosure: Nurse Spreads Word That Patient Has AIDS
- Wrongful Living: Nurse Resuscitates Patient Despite No “Code Blue”
- Nurse Threatens Patient That Filing a Lawsuit Will Result in Blacklisting
- Freedom of Speech: Nurse Is Suspended For Speaking Out
- Nurse Refusing to Treat Terminally Ill Patient Is Herself Terminated
- Schizophrenic Patient Escapes Psychiatric Center And Commits Murder
- Nurse Is Second Guessed After Patient Suffers Severe Mental Retardation
- Is a Nurse Working for a Registry an Employee or Independent Contractor?
- Employer Held Vicariously Liable For the Criminal Acts of Employee
- Good Samaritan Immunity Lasts Till the Emergency Lasts
- Workers’ Compensation Awarded to Nurse Injured on Way to Work
- Captain-of-the-Ship Doctrine: Does the Nurse Work For the Hospital or the Physician?
- Charting Was the Weakest Link
- Refusal to “Float” Sinks The Nurse
- Termination Without Just Cause: Inexperienced Nurse Gets Fired After Four Weeks
- Patient Asked to Leave If He Didn’t Like How Hospital Was Run
- Law Does Not Permit Monday Morning Quarterbacking
- Speaking Out: Nurse Reports Doctor Examining Patient in the Lobby
- Statute of Limitations: Patient Discovers a Sponge 13 Years Later
- Automatic Doors Get Closed on the Patient, Hospital Gets Pinched
- Organ Donation: Good Faith Effort to Obtain Relative’s Consent
- Hospital Fails to Provide Specially-Trained Professional Nurse
- Overworked Nurse Falls Asleep At the Wheel on the Way Home
- Pregnant Nurse Refuses to Treat HIV-Infected Patient, Gets Terminated
- AFP Testing Would Have Detected Spina Bifida
- Nurse’s Medical Records Cannot Be Subpoenaed For Disciplinary Purposes
- Nurse Faces Retaliation For Speaking Tagalog On the Job
- Nurse Disobeys Orders to Remove Patient, Is Herself Removed
- Nurses Lack Bedside Manner
- Nurse “Pulled Something” After Lifting 200- to 300-lb. Patient
- Patient Dumping: Hospital Refuses Treatment to an Indigent Patient
- Patient Sexually Assaulted by Intruder: Was Harm to Patient Foreseeable?
Post-Test
Customer Comments
“You carry a great selection of topics. This course was very interesting. I’d like to see another course like it.”
– C.O., Columbus, OH
“Excellent course – enjoyed reading the different legal situations.”
– L.J., McDonough, GA