Business of Healthcare

🏥Business of Healthcare Unit 12 – Healthcare Ethics and Legal Concerns

Healthcare ethics and legal concerns form the backbone of responsible medical practice. These principles guide healthcare providers in making difficult decisions, ensuring patient rights are protected, and maintaining high standards of care. Legal frameworks like HIPAA and EMTALA set the rules for patient privacy and emergency care. Meanwhile, ethical principles such as autonomy and beneficence help providers navigate complex situations, balancing patient wishes with medical best practices.

Key Ethical Principles in Healthcare

  • Autonomy respects a patient's right to make their own informed decisions about their healthcare and treatment options
  • Beneficence obligates healthcare providers to act in the best interest of their patients and promote their well-being
  • Non-maleficence requires healthcare professionals to avoid causing harm to patients, following the principle of "first, do no harm"
  • Justice ensures fair and equitable distribution of healthcare resources and access to care for all patients, regardless of their background or socioeconomic status
    • Includes addressing disparities in healthcare access and outcomes based on factors such as race, ethnicity, gender, and income level
  • Veracity emphasizes the importance of truthfulness and honesty in the healthcare provider-patient relationship, including providing accurate information about diagnoses, prognoses, and treatment options
  • Fidelity involves healthcare providers fulfilling their professional duties and commitments to their patients, including maintaining confidentiality and acting in their best interests
  • Respect for persons recognizes the inherent dignity and worth of every individual, regardless of their health status or personal characteristics
  • Healthcare providers are subject to various federal and state laws that regulate their practice and protect patient rights
  • The Health Insurance Portability and Accountability Act (HIPAA) establishes national standards for the protection of patient privacy and the security of electronic health information
    • HIPAA's Privacy Rule sets limits on how healthcare providers can use and disclose protected health information (PHI) without patient authorization
    • The Security Rule requires healthcare providers to implement appropriate administrative, physical, and technical safeguards to ensure the confidentiality, integrity, and availability of electronic PHI
  • The Emergency Medical Treatment and Active Labor Act (EMTALA) requires hospitals participating in Medicare to provide a medical screening examination and stabilizing treatment to anyone who comes to the emergency department, regardless of their ability to pay
  • State medical practice acts define the scope of practice for healthcare professionals, including licensing requirements, disciplinary procedures, and standards of care
  • Healthcare providers must also adhere to professional codes of ethics, such as the American Medical Association's Code of Medical Ethics, which provide guidance on ethical conduct and decision-making
  • Patients have the right to participate in their healthcare decisions and to receive information about their diagnosis, prognosis, and treatment options in a way they can understand
  • Informed consent is the process by which healthcare providers disclose relevant information to patients about a proposed treatment or procedure, including its risks, benefits, and alternatives, and obtain the patient's voluntary agreement to proceed
    • For informed consent to be valid, the patient must have the capacity to make decisions, receive adequate information, and make a voluntary choice without coercion or undue influence
  • Patients have the right to refuse treatment, even if it is medically recommended, and to withdraw consent at any time
  • Healthcare providers must respect patients' advance directives, such as living wills and healthcare powers of attorney, which specify their preferences for medical treatment in the event they become incapacitated
  • Patients have the right to access their medical records and to request amendments if they believe the information is inaccurate or incomplete

Privacy and Confidentiality in Healthcare

  • Healthcare providers have a legal and ethical duty to protect the privacy and confidentiality of patient information
  • The HIPAA Privacy Rule establishes national standards for the use and disclosure of protected health information (PHI) by covered entities, including healthcare providers, health plans, and healthcare clearinghouses
    • PHI includes any individually identifiable health information that is transmitted or maintained in any form or medium, such as medical records, billing information, and conversations about a patient's care
  • Healthcare providers may disclose PHI without patient authorization for certain purposes, such as treatment, payment, and healthcare operations, but must limit the disclosure to the minimum necessary to accomplish the intended purpose
  • Patients have the right to receive a notice of privacy practices from their healthcare providers, which explains how their PHI may be used and disclosed and their rights under HIPAA
  • Healthcare providers must implement reasonable safeguards to protect the confidentiality of PHI, such as securing medical records, using encryption for electronic transmissions, and training staff on privacy policies and procedures
  • Breaches of patient privacy can result in significant legal and financial consequences for healthcare providers, including civil and criminal penalties under HIPAA and state laws

Ethical Decision-Making Models

  • Ethical decision-making models provide a structured approach for healthcare providers to navigate complex ethical dilemmas and make justifiable decisions
  • The Four Principles approach, developed by Beauchamp and Childress, considers the principles of autonomy, beneficence, non-maleficence, and justice in evaluating the ethical permissibility of an action
  • The Jonsen-Siegler-Winslade model, also known as the Four Quadrants approach, analyzes ethical dilemmas in terms of medical indications, patient preferences, quality of life, and contextual features
  • Casuistry involves comparing the current case to similar cases and their outcomes to determine the most appropriate course of action
  • The MORAL model, developed by Patricia Crisham, guides healthcare providers through the steps of Massage the dilemma, Outline options, Review criteria and resolve, Affirm position and act, and Look back and evaluate
  • Ethical decision-making models emphasize the importance of gathering relevant information, identifying and weighing competing ethical principles and values, considering alternative courses of action, and engaging in reflective practice to learn from the experience

Common Ethical Dilemmas in Healthcare

  • End-of-life care decisions, such as withholding or withdrawing life-sustaining treatment, can raise ethical concerns about patient autonomy, quality of life, and the appropriate use of healthcare resources
  • Allocation of scarce resources, such as organ transplants or intensive care unit beds, requires balancing the principles of utility, equity, and fairness in determining who should receive priority
  • Informed consent issues can arise when patients lack decision-making capacity due to age, mental illness, or other factors, or when there are language or cultural barriers to effective communication
  • Confidentiality and privacy concerns may conflict with other ethical duties, such as protecting public health or preventing harm to others (duty to warn)
  • Reproductive health issues, such as abortion, contraception, and assisted reproductive technologies, can involve competing values and beliefs about the moral status of the fetus and the scope of reproductive rights
  • Research ethics dilemmas, such as the use of placebo controls or the enrollment of vulnerable populations, require balancing the potential benefits of scientific knowledge with the protection of research participants
  • Conflicts of interest, such as financial relationships with pharmaceutical companies or self-referral practices, can compromise the integrity of healthcare decision-making and undermine patient trust
  • Healthcare providers can be held legally liable for malpractice if they fail to meet the standard of care and cause injury or harm to a patient
    • The standard of care is generally defined as the level of skill, knowledge, and care that a reasonably prudent healthcare provider would exercise under similar circumstances
  • To prove malpractice, a plaintiff must typically establish four elements: duty (the existence of a healthcare provider-patient relationship), breach (failure to meet the standard of care), causation (the breach caused the injury), and damages (the patient suffered harm as a result)
  • Malpractice claims can result in significant financial damages, including compensatory damages for economic losses (medical expenses, lost wages) and non-economic losses (pain and suffering), as well as punitive damages in cases of gross negligence or intentional misconduct
  • Healthcare providers can mitigate their risk of malpractice liability by maintaining appropriate licensure and credentialing, staying current with best practices and clinical guidelines, documenting patient care thoroughly and accurately, and communicating effectively with patients and other providers
  • Many states have enacted tort reform measures to limit malpractice liability, such as caps on non-economic damages, shorter statutes of limitations, and requirements for pre-trial screening panels or expert witness qualifications
  • Advances in genetic testing and precision medicine raise ethical questions about the appropriate use and disclosure of genetic information, the potential for genetic discrimination, and the implications for patient autonomy and informed consent
  • The increasing use of artificial intelligence and machine learning in healthcare decision-making presents challenges for ensuring transparency, accountability, and fairness in algorithmic decision-making and avoiding biases that could exacerbate health disparities
  • Telemedicine and remote monitoring technologies offer new opportunities for expanding access to care and improving patient outcomes, but also raise concerns about privacy, security, and the quality of the provider-patient relationship
  • The opioid epidemic has highlighted ethical tensions between the goals of pain management and the risks of addiction and diversion, as well as the responsibilities of healthcare providers in preventing and treating substance use disorders
  • Climate change and environmental health threats, such as air pollution and extreme weather events, pose new challenges for healthcare systems and raise questions about the role of healthcare providers in promoting environmental sustainability and health equity
  • The COVID-19 pandemic has exposed ethical dilemmas related to the allocation of scarce resources (ventilators, vaccines), the balance between individual liberties and public health measures (quarantines, mask mandates), and the disproportionate impact of the virus on vulnerable populations
  • The increasing globalization of healthcare, including medical tourism and the outsourcing of clinical trials, raises ethical issues related to the exploitation of vulnerable populations, the quality and safety of care across borders, and the impact on local healthcare systems in developing countries


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© 2024 Fiveable Inc. All rights reserved.
AP® and SAT® are trademarks registered by the College Board, which is not affiliated with, and does not endorse this website.