An analysis of the validity of medical legal documentation in cases where the patient refuses treatment and/or transport

Objectives. We investigated whether patient record forms (PRFs), as currently completed, meet minimum legal standards and provide medicolegal protection to prehospital healthcare providers, and if their qualification levels influence the level of detail recorded in the patient records.Methods. We re...

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Main Authors: Simpiwe Sobuwa, Richard Spicer
Format: Article
Language:English
Published: Health and Medical Publishing Group 2014-11-01
Series:South African Journal of Bioethics and Law
Online Access:http://www.sajbl.org.za/index.php/sajbl/article/download/311/357
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spelling doaj-43413aa36ab94eb79c38a48e03fadf1f2020-11-24T21:34:01ZengHealth and Medical Publishing GroupSouth African Journal of Bioethics and Law1999-76392014-11-0172646810.7196/SAJBL.311An analysis of the validity of medical legal documentation in cases where the patient refuses treatment and/or transportSimpiwe SobuwaRichard SpicerObjectives. We investigated whether patient record forms (PRFs), as currently completed, meet minimum legal standards and provide medicolegal protection to prehospital healthcare providers, and if their qualification levels influence the level of detail recorded in the patient records.Methods. We retrospectively reviewed consecutive case reports at a single centre over a 1-month period for cases in which ambulance crews attended a patient and the patient later refused to accept transportation to a medical facility. Scores were calculated for each case report, based on the number of data fields completed. The scores were compared for variation between qualifications.Results. A total of 5 873 ambulance cases were dispatched during this period. Case reports for refusal of transport (n=229) were reviewed. No case report achieved 100% compliance with legal requirements. There was no statistically significant variation between levels of qualification with regard to improved detail being recorded. Young adults were the most likely to refuse transport. Most of the refusals occurred in the late evening.Conclusion. Refusal of transport and its documentation are poorly understood and practised by prehospital healthcare providers. The implication is that some patients’ rights could potentially be infringed. This could lead to possible grounds for litigation, for which the defence would also hinge on the adequacy of the documentation.http://www.sajbl.org.za/index.php/sajbl/article/download/311/357
collection DOAJ
language English
format Article
sources DOAJ
author Simpiwe Sobuwa
Richard Spicer
spellingShingle Simpiwe Sobuwa
Richard Spicer
An analysis of the validity of medical legal documentation in cases where the patient refuses treatment and/or transport
South African Journal of Bioethics and Law
author_facet Simpiwe Sobuwa
Richard Spicer
author_sort Simpiwe Sobuwa
title An analysis of the validity of medical legal documentation in cases where the patient refuses treatment and/or transport
title_short An analysis of the validity of medical legal documentation in cases where the patient refuses treatment and/or transport
title_full An analysis of the validity of medical legal documentation in cases where the patient refuses treatment and/or transport
title_fullStr An analysis of the validity of medical legal documentation in cases where the patient refuses treatment and/or transport
title_full_unstemmed An analysis of the validity of medical legal documentation in cases where the patient refuses treatment and/or transport
title_sort analysis of the validity of medical legal documentation in cases where the patient refuses treatment and/or transport
publisher Health and Medical Publishing Group
series South African Journal of Bioethics and Law
issn 1999-7639
publishDate 2014-11-01
description Objectives. We investigated whether patient record forms (PRFs), as currently completed, meet minimum legal standards and provide medicolegal protection to prehospital healthcare providers, and if their qualification levels influence the level of detail recorded in the patient records.Methods. We retrospectively reviewed consecutive case reports at a single centre over a 1-month period for cases in which ambulance crews attended a patient and the patient later refused to accept transportation to a medical facility. Scores were calculated for each case report, based on the number of data fields completed. The scores were compared for variation between qualifications.Results. A total of 5 873 ambulance cases were dispatched during this period. Case reports for refusal of transport (n=229) were reviewed. No case report achieved 100% compliance with legal requirements. There was no statistically significant variation between levels of qualification with regard to improved detail being recorded. Young adults were the most likely to refuse transport. Most of the refusals occurred in the late evening.Conclusion. Refusal of transport and its documentation are poorly understood and practised by prehospital healthcare providers. The implication is that some patients’ rights could potentially be infringed. This could lead to possible grounds for litigation, for which the defence would also hinge on the adequacy of the documentation.
url http://www.sajbl.org.za/index.php/sajbl/article/download/311/357
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