I just came home from my EMT-B class, and I have been thinking a lot about what was lectured. Essentially I now understand that by becoming an EMT, I open my self up to huge liabilities, and I never realized how much danger there is in a refusal of care.
I now understand that even if a pt. of legal age and mental status signs a Refusal of Care Form, we tell them that if things change to call us back, they decompensate, don't call us, and sue us, it is our butts on the line, despite the fact we have paperwork that states otherwise.
Even if legally we are in the right, they can take the case to Civil Court, and in front of a jury of their peers look like a damsel in distress, and essentially say, "I was sick, and this EMT did nothing to help me!", and we are defenseless.
How realistic is this situation? Does this really happen? What is the real purpose of refusal of care forms? Was the moral of that story, that, without committing kidnapping not to let patients go?
I also learned theoretically what needs to be proven in order to be prosecuted for negligence, but now understand that often prosecutors get by proving much less. Does this happen?
I am interesting in EMS for other reasons then being sued all the time. I have read little about this side of the job from here, or anywhere else, but it still seems daunting.
Thanks a lot for your comments...
DES
I now understand that even if a pt. of legal age and mental status signs a Refusal of Care Form, we tell them that if things change to call us back, they decompensate, don't call us, and sue us, it is our butts on the line, despite the fact we have paperwork that states otherwise.
Even if legally we are in the right, they can take the case to Civil Court, and in front of a jury of their peers look like a damsel in distress, and essentially say, "I was sick, and this EMT did nothing to help me!", and we are defenseless.
How realistic is this situation? Does this really happen? What is the real purpose of refusal of care forms? Was the moral of that story, that, without committing kidnapping not to let patients go?
I also learned theoretically what needs to be proven in order to be prosecuted for negligence, but now understand that often prosecutors get by proving much less. Does this happen?
I am interesting in EMS for other reasons then being sued all the time. I have read little about this side of the job from here, or anywhere else, but it still seems daunting.
Thanks a lot for your comments...
DES