Your Rights as a Patient!!!
Patients Bill of Rights
The
Patient Bill of Rights is listed below. I am
including a note to you that you are welcome to use anything found on
this site, either copy and paste it to print it out or send it to
someone you think could use it. Please also use any information
to take with you to doctor appointments and ask them about new treatments
or facts you may have found on this site.
Please DO NOT
use the information on this site as the final answer in any diagnosis
or treatment. Always ask your doctor what treatment is best for
you, they know best.
Thank you
Below is a Patient Bill of Rights, for you
have the right to have a Doctor that will listen to you and that you
are comfortable with:
A Patient's Bill of Rights
The American Hospital Association presents "A Patient's Bill of Rights"
with the expectation that observance of these rights will contribute to
more effective patient care and greater satisfaction for the patient,
his physician, and the hospital organization. Further, the association
presents these rights in the expectation that they will be supported by
the hospital on behalf of its patients as an integral part of the
healing process. It is recognized that a personal relationship between
the physician and the patient is essential for the provision of proper
medical care.
1. The patient has the right to considerate and respectful care.
2. The patient has the right to obtain from his
physician complete current information concerning his diagnosis,
treatment, and prognosis in terms the patient can be reasonably expect
to understand. When it is not medically advisable to give such
information to the patient, the information shall be made available to
an appropriate person in his behalf. He has the right to know, by name,
the physician responsible for coordinating his care.
3. The patient has the right to receive from his
physician information necessary to give informed consent prior to the
start of any procedure and/or treatment. Except in emergencies, such
information for informed consent should include, but not necessarily be
limited to, the specific procedure and/or treatment, the medically
significant risks involved, and the probable duration of
incapacitation. Where medically significant alternatives for care or
treatment exists, or when the patient requests information concerning
medical alternatives, the patient has the right to such information.
The patient also has the right to know the name of the person
responsible for the procedures and/or treatment.
4. The patient has the right to refuse treatment to
the extent permitted by law and to be informed of the medical
consequences of his action.
5. The patient has the right to every consideration
of his privacy concerning his own medical care program. Case
discussion, consultation, examination, and treatment are confidential
and should be conducted discreetly. Those not directly involved in his
care must have the permission of the patient to be present.
6. The patient has the right to expect that all
communications and records pertaining to his care should be treated as
confidential.
7. The patient has the right to expect that within
its capacity a hospital must make reasonable response to the request of
a patient for services. The hospital must provide evaluation, service,
and/or referral as indicated by the urgency of the case. When medically
permissible, a patient may be transferred to another facility only
after he has received complete information and explanation concerning
the needs for and alternatives to such a transfer. The institution to
which the patient is to be transferred must first have accepted the
patient for transfer.
8. The patient has the right to obtain information
as to any relationship of his hospital to other health care and
educational institutions insofar as his care is concerned. The patient
has the right to obtain information as to the existence of any
professional relationship among individuals, by name, who are treating
him.
9. The patient has the right to be advised if the
hospital proposed to engage in or perform human experimentation
affecting his care or treatment. The patient has the right to refuse to
participate in such research projects.
10. The patient has the right to expect reasonable
continuity of care. He has the right to know in advance what
appointment times and physicians are available and where. The patient
has the right to expect that the hospital will provide a mechanism
whereby he is informed by his physician or a delegate of the physician
of the patient's continuing health care requirements following
discharge.
11. The patient has the right to examine and receive
an explanation of his bill, regardless of source of payment.
12. The patient has the right to know what hospital rules and regulations apply to his conduct as a patient.
No catalog of rights can guarantee for the patient
the kind of treatment he has a right to expect. A hospital has many
functions to perform, including the prevention and treatment of
disease, the education of both health professionals and patients, and
the conduct of clinical research. All these activities must be
conducted with an overriding concern for the patient, and, above all,
the recognition of his dignity as a human being. Success in achieving
this recognition ensure success in the defense of the rights of the
patient.