Apr 20, 2024  
Fall 2017 Catalog 
    
Fall 2017 Catalog [ARCHIVED CATALOG]

PA 250 - Legal Issues in Health Care


Credit Hours: 3

Designed as an elective for paralegal, health sciences and liberal arts students, this course will provide the student with an overview of legal issues in healthcare. Topics include principles of justice, sources and definition(s) of law, judicial process and legal tests and professionalism. Case studies will be analyzed.

 

*Paralegal Elective - not required for a Paralegal degree.  Course is designed for Health Science Students.

Course Outcomes
Upon completion of the course, the student will be able to:

  • develop a definition for ethical behavior;
  • clarify the concept of medical ethics;
  • distinguish between rights and responsibilities of health care workers;
  • distinguish between individual and professional ethics;
  • compare the utility of various ethical theories and theory tests to medical ethics;
  • describe the ethical principles of autonomy, nonmaleficence and beneficence, and provide examples of same within various health care situations;
  • distinguish between legal and ethical issues and provide examples where the two may conflict;
  • provide arguments to support a duty of veracity, i.e., a duty to tell the truth and not to lie or to deceive others;
  • identify the rationale and rules for confidentiality and privacy within the health care delivery system;
  • identify the rationale and rules fidelity issues within the health care delivery system;
  • discuss the salient issues identified in “A Patient’s Bill of Rights” (American Hospital Association, 1973) or other codes of ethics;
  • identify the need for distinctions between various health professions, i.e., scopes of practice;
  • discuss the impacts of the relationships between various professional groups and agencies in the health care delivery system, i.e., physical relationships, research hospitals and medical schools;
  • develop a working definition of justice;
  • distinguish between a civil and a criminal wrong;
  • define common, constitutional and statute law;
  • define tort law and distinguish between intentional torts and negligence;
  • describe the “reasonable person” rule;
  • describe circumstances where one professional health care person would be held to a different standard of care than another health care worker, i.e., nurse vs. physician;
  • list the essential components of a negligent act;
  • define and describe comparative negligence;
  • describe the doctrine of “Res Ipsa Loquitur”;
  • provide examples of intentional torts in health care delivery systems;
  • describe the concept of informed consent;
  • discuss problems associated with minors and incompetents to the concept of informed consent;
  • list standards of conduct which protect a patient’s right to privacy;
  • discuss situations in which patient information may be disclosed;
  • describe techniques to limit access to patient information, i.e., computerized patient’s records;
  • list and describe practices to follow to minimize the potential of a malpractice suit;
  • identify limitations of liability insurance coverage provided by an employer or insurance company and identify actions that may invalidate coverage; and
  • using a case study approach, evaluate the legal and ethical issues in the cases provided.


S (C)