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Medico-Legal Issues

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Title: Medico-Legal Issues


1
Medico-Legal Issues Trauma Care Rebekah Ley,
LLB (Hons), MSc
2
Introduction
  • Challenges of trauma care and trauma units.
  • The Law but which ones?
  • Scenarios.
  • Ethics.
  • Shields not swords.

3
Challenges
  • What makes trauma care (the emergency
    department) different?
  • What do you know about your patient?
  • How many patients need to be seen?
  • How quickly must you make a decision?
  • Quality indicators.
  • Legal and ethical interface.

4
The Law but which ones?
  • Privacy and confidentiality.
  • Viewed as a basic human right.
  • If you dont keep things secret patients wont
    share important information to enable diagnosis
    and treatment.
  • However sometimes disclosure is compulsory and
    permissible
  • Data Protection Act.
  • Public Health.
  • Professional codes of conduct.

5
The Law but which ones?
  • Capacity
  • Mental Capacity Act.
  • Cant simply explain the risks and then ask a
    patient to agree.
  • Quick screen, ask the patient
  • What is wrong with you?
  • Do you know what your options are?
  • Whats likely to happen if you accept the
    treatment or refuse it?
  • What is your choice?
  • Why have you made this choice?

6
The Law but which ones?
  • Advance Directives
  • Basis is the concept of autonomy.
  • Mental Capacity Act.
  • Prior the Mental Capacity Act.
  • The directive may
  • Be a statement a competent individual has made
    about desired future care.
  • Be more formal and rarely appoint a person to
    make decisions for them.
  • Consider intention not just the specifics
    consult.

7
The Law but which ones?
  • Criminal behaviour
  • Investigation and prevention of crime.
  • Road traffic offences.
  • Judicial or other statutory proceedings.
  • Safeguarding.

8
Scenarios Privacy and Confidentiality
  • 15 year old girl admitted following RTA her
    boyfriend was driving the car. She admits to
    being pregnant. She tells you that she does not
    want her parents to know. What should you do?

9
Scenarios Privacy and Confidentiality
  • Consider
  • Normally only share with express consent.
  • Competence.
  • GMC Guidance.
  • Safeguarding issues?

10
Scenarios - Capacity
  • 27 year old male brought to the Trauma Centre by
    friends after consuming an unspecified amount of
    cocaine. He is unkempt and shivering. His
    observations are pulse 172 bpm BP 196/30 mm Hg
    RR 36 breaths/min temp 37.8C Sp02 100 on room
    air. He is connected to a cardiac monitor, given
    oxygen and an intravenous catheter inserted.

11
Scenarios - Capacity
  • The doctor asks for the patient to be given 10mg
    of diazepam. The patient says he doesnt want
    it. He says that he has been through this before
    and recovered. His friends say that he doesnt
    know what hes saying and ask the doctors to
    treat him.
  • What should you do?

to treat him. What should you do?
12
Scenarios - Capacity
  • The consequences of refusing emergency care may
    be serious and permanent.
  • Sudden cardiac arrest?
  • Intoxicants, hypoxia, brain injury, mental
    illness and dementia are common problems that can
    impair decision making but just because they are
    present doesnt mean the patient lacks capacity.
  • Be sure to assess carefully you can use the quick
    screen.
  • Can you defer the decision while the patient
    improves?
  • Document the decision

13
Scenarios Advance Directives
  • A 75 year old male has been airlifted to
    hospital after falling 10ft from a roof. He was
    initially unconscious but when paramedics arrived
    he was awake but confused. His GCS was 14. He
    was immobilised with a C-collar and backboard.
    During transfer to the trauma centre his GCS
    dropped from 14 to 10. On assessment significant
    head injury was suspected and arrangements being
    made to transfer the patient to CT when the
    patients wife and son arrive.

14
Scenarios Advance Directives
  • The patient suddenly deteriorates dropping his
    GCS to 8. Clinicians prepare to intubate but the
    wife becomes very upset saying that her husband
    has a living will that says if he is critically
    ill he does not want any interventions including
    intubation.

15
Scenarios Advance Directives
  • Advance Directives/living wills can have limited
    application.
  • Context.
  • Would the patient have wanted the directive to
    apply to this particular circumstance e.g., did
    he write it contemplating something irreversible
    or this situation?
  • What will you do?

16
Ethics
  • Understanding and acknowledging your own views.
  • Dissecting common problems and common themes.
  • Remember
  • Ethics and the law are not the same following
    the law does not necessarily result in ethical
    behaviour and ethical behaviour might not be
    covered by the law.
  • Difficult to disentangle these concepts in trauma
    care.
  • While legal and ethical conclusions may be
    similar, ethical and legal analysis are often
    very different.

17
Shields not swords
  • Having worked in the NHS for twenty years I have
    seen most things.
  • The best advice I can give anybody here today is
    simple (you should be doing it anyway) but just
    in case
  • I call it 3Cs -
  • Casenotes
  • Communication
  • Competence
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