Answer each Question from Health Law and Ethics
CHAPTER 3
Tort Law: Negligence
Copyright © 2023 by Jones & Bartlett Learning, LLC an Ascend Learning Company. www.jblearning.com.
Copyright © 2023 by Jones & Bartlett Learning, LLC an Ascend Learning Company. www.jblearning.com
Learning Objectives
Describe what a tort is and the objectives of tort law.
Define negligence and explain how it differs from malpractice.
Explain how the commission and omission of an act differ.
Explain the elements necessary to prove a negligence case.
Describe the importance of foreseeability in a negligence case.
Copyright © 2023 by Jones & Bartlett Learning, LLC an Ascend Learning Company. www.jblearning.com
Tort Law: Definition
A tort is a civil wrong, other than a breach of contract, committed against a person or property (real or personal) for which a court provides a remedy in the form of an action for damages.
Copyright © 2023 by Jones & Bartlett Learning, LLC an Ascend Learning Company. www.jblearning.com
Objectives of Tort Law
Preservation: To preserve peace between individuals
Culpability: To find fault for wrongdoing
Deterrence: To discourage the wrongdoer (tort-feasor) from committing future wrongful acts
Compensation: To indemnify injured person(s)
Copyright © 2023 by Jones & Bartlett Learning, LLC an Ascend Learning Company. www.jblearning.com
Categories of Tort Law
Negligent torts
Intentional torts
Strict liability
Copyright © 2023 by Jones & Bartlett Learning, LLC an Ascend Learning Company. www.jblearning.com
Negligence
Negligence is a tort.
It is the “unintentional” commission or omission of an act that a reasonably prudent person would or would not do under given circumstances.
Copyright © 2023 by Jones & Bartlett Learning, LLC an Ascend Learning Company. www.jblearning.com
Commission of an Act
Administering the wrong medication
Administering the wrong dosage of a medication
Administering medication to the wrong patient
Performing a surgical procedure without patient consent
Performing a surgical procedure on the wrong patient or body part
Performing the wrong surgical procedure
Copyright © 2023 by Jones & Bartlett Learning, LLC an Ascend Learning Company. www.jblearning.com
Omission of an Act
Failing to conduct a thorough history and physical examination
Failing to assess and reassess a patient’s nutritional needs
Failing to administer medications
Failing to order diagnostic tests
Failing to follow up on abnormal test results
Failing to conduct a time-out prior to surgery
Copyright © 2023 by Jones & Bartlett Learning, LLC an Ascend Learning Company. www.jblearning.com
Malpractice
Negligence or carelessness of a professional person
Nurse practitioner, pharmacist, physician, physician’s assistant
Example: A surgeon who conducts a surgical procedure on the wrong body part
Copyright © 2023 by Jones & Bartlett Learning, LLC an Ascend Learning Company. www.jblearning.com
Criminal Negligence
“Reckless disregard” for the safety of another
Willful indifference to injury that could follow an act
Copyright © 2023 by Jones & Bartlett Learning, LLC an Ascend Learning Company. www.jblearning.com
Forms of Negligence
Malfeasance
Misfeasance
Nonfeasance
Copyright © 2023 by Jones & Bartlett Learning, LLC an Ascend Learning Company. www.jblearning.com
Malfeasance
Execution of an unlawful or improper act
Example: Performing a partial birth abortion in the third trimester when prohibited by law
Copyright © 2023 by Jones & Bartlett Learning, LLC an Ascend Learning Company. www.jblearning.com
Misfeasance
Improper performance of an act
Example: Wrong-sided surgery, such as the removal of a healthy left kidney instead of the diseased right kidney
Copyright © 2023 by Jones & Bartlett Learning, LLC an Ascend Learning Company. www.jblearning.com
Nonfeasance
Failure to act when there is a duty to act
Example: Failing to order diagnostic tests or prescribe medications that should have been ordered or prescribed under the circumstances
Copyright © 2023 by Jones & Bartlett Learning, LLC an Ascend Learning Company. www.jblearning.com
Degrees of Negligence
Slight negligence: Minor deviation of what is expected under the circumstances
Ordinary negligence: Failure to do what an ordinary, prudent person would do
Gross negligence: Intentional or wanton omission of required care or performance of an act
Copyright © 2023 by Jones & Bartlett Learning, LLC an Ascend Learning Company. www.jblearning.com
Elements of Negligence
Duty to use due care
Standard of care
Breach of duty
Injury/actual damages
Causation
Proximate cause
Foreseeability
Copyright © 2023 by Jones & Bartlett Learning, LLC an Ascend Learning Company. www.jblearning.com
Duty to Care
A legal obligation of care, performance, or observance imposed on one to conform to a recognized standard of care to safeguard the rights of others
Copyright © 2023 by Jones & Bartlett Learning, LLC an Ascend Learning Company. www.jblearning.com
Standard of Care
The standard of care describes the conduct expected of an individual in a given situation.
The general standard of care that must be exercised describes what a “reasonably prudent person” would or would not do under the “same or similar circumstances.”
It is a measuring stick for properly assessing actual conduct required of an individual.
The reasonableness of conduct is judged in light of the circumstances apparent at the time of injury and by reference to different characteristics of the actor (e.g., age, gender, physical condition, education, knowledge, training, and mental capacity).
Copyright © 2023 by Jones & Bartlett Learning, LLC an Ascend Learning Company. www.jblearning.com
Reasonably Prudent Person
Describes a nonexistent, hypothetical person who is put forward as the community ideal of what would be considered reasonable behavior
Copyright © 2023 by Jones & Bartlett Learning, LLC an Ascend Learning Company. www.jblearning.com
Similar Circumstances
Circumstances at the time of the injury
Circumstances of the alleged wrongdoer(s) at the time of injury
Age
Physical condition
Education and training
Licenses held
Mental capacity, etc.
Copyright © 2023 by Jones & Bartlett Learning, LLC an Ascend Learning Company. www.jblearning.com
Determining Standard of Care
Established by a legislative enactment or administrative regulation
Adopted by the court from a legislative enactment or an administrative regulation
Established by judicial decision
Applied to the facts of the case by the trial judge or jury if there is no such enactment, regulation, or decision
Courts often rely on the testimony of an expert witness as to the standard of care required.
Community standard of care vs. national standard of care
Copyright © 2023 by Jones & Bartlett Learning, LLC an Ascend Learning Company. www.jblearning.com
Duty Created by Statute
The defendant must have been within the specified class of persons outlined in the statute.
The plaintiff must have been injured in a way that the statute was designed to prevent.
The plaintiff must show that the injury would not have occurred if the statute had not been violated.
Copyright © 2023 by Jones & Bartlett Learning, LLC an Ascend Learning Company. www.jblearning.com
Hastings Case: Duty to Care
The duty to care in this case cannot be reasonably disputed.
Louisiana, by statute, imposes a duty on hospitals licensed in Louisiana to make emergency services available to all persons residing in the state regardless of insurance coverage or economic status.
The hospital’s bylaws provide that patient transfer should not occur without due consideration for the patient’s condition.
Copyright © 2023 by Jones & Bartlett Learning, LLC an Ascend Learning Company. www.jblearning.com
Community vs. National Standard
Community standard
The hometown standard: We want to do things our way.
National standard
Most currently accepted standard of care on a national basis
Copyright © 2023 by Jones & Bartlett Learning, LLC an Ascend Learning Company. www.jblearning.com
Ethics and Standard of Care
Some medical standards of care are influenced by medical ethics.
Example: A decision concerning termination of resuscitation efforts is an area in which the standard of care includes an ethical component.
Copyright © 2023 by Jones & Bartlett Learning, LLC an Ascend Learning Company. www.jblearning.com
Case: Hiring Practices, Duty of Employer (1 of 2)
The nurse was hired sight unseen over the telephone.
The applicant falsely stated in an employee application that he was licensed as an LPN.
His license was not verified by the employer.
He had committed 56 criminal offenses of theft.
He assaulted a resident and broke the resident’s leg.
What was the duty of the employer?
Copyright © 2023 by Jones & Bartlett Learning, LLC an Ascend Learning Company. www.jblearning.com
Case: Hiring Practices, Duty of Employer (2 of 2)
Standard expected:
The employer had a “duty” to validate the nurse’s professional license.
Copyright © 2023 by Jones & Bartlett Learning, LLC an Ascend Learning Company. www.jblearning.com
Breach of Duty
The failure to conform to or the departure from a required obligation owed to a person
The obligation to perform according to a standard of care may encompass either doing or refraining from doing a particular act.
Deviation from the recognized standard of care
Failure to adhere to an obligation
Failure to conform to or the departure from a required duty of care owed to a person
Copyright © 2023 by Jones & Bartlett Learning, LLC an Ascend Learning Company. www.jblearning.com
Hastings Case: Breach of Duty
Hospital regulations provided that when a physician cannot be reached or refuses a call, the chief of service must be notified so that another physician can be obtained. This was not done.
A plaintiff need not prove that the patient would have survived if proper treatment had been administered, only that the patient would have had a chance of survival.
Copyright © 2023 by Jones & Bartlett Learning, LLC an Ascend Learning Company. www.jblearning.com
Breach of Duty Examples
Examples of breach of duty:
A physician fails to respond to his or her on-call duties.
An employer fails to adequately conduct a pre-employment check (e.g., licensure, background check).
Copyright © 2023 by Jones & Bartlett Learning, LLC an Ascend Learning Company. www.jblearning.com
Case: Hiring Practices, Breach of Duty (1 of 2)
The nurse was hired sight unseen over the telephone.
The applicant falsely stated in an employee application that he was licensed as an LPN.
His license was not verified by the employer.
He had committed 56 criminal offenses of theft.
He assaulted a resident and broke the resident’s leg.
What was the breach of duty?
Copyright © 2023 by Jones & Bartlett Learning, LLC an Ascend Learning Company. www.jblearning.com
Case: Hiring Practices, Breach of Duty (2 of 2)
The employer failed to verify the applicant’s licensure.
A more thorough background check should have revealed this employee’s previous criminal conduct.
Discuss the element of injury.
Copyright © 2023 by Jones & Bartlett Learning, LLC an Ascend Learning Company. www.jblearning.com
Injury
Actual damages must be established.
If there are no injuries, no damages are due.
Copyright © 2023 by Jones & Bartlett Learning, LLC an Ascend Learning Company. www.jblearning.com
Hastings Case: Injury
Causation in Hastings v. Baton Rouge Hospital was well-established.
In the ordinary course of events, Hastings would not have bled to death in a hospital emergency department over a 2-hour period without some surgical intervention to save his life.
Copyright © 2023 by Jones & Bartlett Learning, LLC an Ascend Learning Company. www.jblearning.com
Case: Hiring Practices, Injury (1 of 2)
The nurse was hired sight unseen over the telephone.
The applicant falsely stated in an employee application that he was licensed as an LPN.
His license was not verified by the employer.
He had committed 56 criminal offenses of theft.
He assaulted a resident and broke the resident’s leg.
What was the injury?
Copyright © 2023 by Jones & Bartlett Learning, LLC an Ascend Learning Company. www.jblearning.com
Case: Hiring Practices, Injury (2 of 2)
The resident suffered a broken leg.
The hospital is vicariously liable for the nurse’s conduct.
Criminal charges are applicable in this case against the nurse.
Copyright © 2023 by Jones & Bartlett Learning, LLC an Ascend Learning Company. www.jblearning.com
Causation
Reasonable anticipation that harm or injury is likely to result from an act or an omission to act
Act or conduct in departing from recognized standard of care must be the cause of the patient’s injury.
Injury must have resulted from breach of duty.
Injury must have been foreseeable.
Copyright © 2023 by Jones & Bartlett Learning, LLC an Ascend Learning Company. www.jblearning.com
Eliminating Causes
Another way to establish the causal relationship between the particular conduct of a defendant and a plaintiff’s injury is through the process of eliminating causes other than the defendant’s conduct.
Copyright © 2023 by Jones & Bartlett Learning, LLC an Ascend Learning Company. www.jblearning.com
Hastings Case: Causation
Causation in Hastings v. Baton Rouge Hospital was well-established.
In the ordinary course of events, Hastings would not have bled to death in a hospital emergency department over a 2-hour period without some surgical intervention to save his life.
Copyright © 2023 by Jones & Bartlett Learning, LLC an Ascend Learning Company. www.jblearning.com
Case: Hiring Practices, Causation
The nurse was hired sight unseen over the telephone.
The applicant falsely stated in an employee application that he was licensed as an LPN.
His license was not verified by the employer.
He had committed 56 criminal offenses of theft.
He assaulted a resident and broke the resident’s leg.
Copyright © 2023 by Jones & Bartlett Learning, LLC an Ascend Learning Company. www.jblearning.com
Case: Hiring Practices, Causation
Reasonable anticipation that harm or injury was likely to occur
The patient suffered a broken leg.
Departing from recognized standard of care
Failure to verify licensure and conduct an adequate background check
Injury resulted from the breach of duty
Injury was foreseeable
Copyright © 2023 by Jones & Bartlett Learning, LLC an Ascend Learning Company. www.jblearning.com
Case: Failure to Administer Proper Nourishment
Failure to administer proper hydration
Not unreasonable to conclude that one’s dehydration can be caused by failing to provide water.
Describe what is meant by foreseeability.
Copyright © 2023 by Jones & Bartlett Learning, LLC an Ascend Learning Company. www.jblearning.com
Foreseeability
Reasonable anticipation that harm or injury is likely to result from an act or an omission to act
Copyright © 2023 by Jones & Bartlett Learning, LLC an Ascend Learning Company. www.jblearning.com
Test for Foreseeability
The test for foreseeability is whether a person of ordinary prudence and intelligence should have anticipated danger to others caused by his or her negligent act.
Copyright © 2023 by Jones & Bartlett Learning, LLC an Ascend Learning Company. www.jblearning.com
Hastings Case: Foreseeability
In Hastings v. Baton Rouge Hospital, it was highly probable that the patient would die if the bleeding was not stopped.
The broad test of negligence is what a reasonably prudent person would foresee and would do in light of this foresight under the circumstances.
Copyright © 2023 by Jones & Bartlett Learning, LLC an Ascend Learning Company. www.jblearning.com
Case: Hiring Practices, Foreseeability
A person of ordinary prudence and intelligence should have anticipated the danger to the resident caused by the employer’s negligent act.
Copyright © 2023 by Jones & Bartlett Learning, LLC an Ascend Learning Company. www.jblearning.com
Case: Hot Radiator, Foreseeability
A patient’s left foot came in contact with a radiator and she suffered third-degree burns.
The defendant had knowledge of the plaintiff’s condition.
The defendant should have shielded the radiator or not placed the plaintiff next to it.
Copyright © 2023 by Jones & Bartlett Learning, LLC an Ascend Learning Company. www.jblearning.com
Cases: Foreseeability
O’Neill v. Montefiore Hospital (1960)
O’Neill visits ER at 5:00 AM with chest pains.
Niles v. City of San Rafael (1974)
Kelly Niles suffers head injury.
Hastings v. Baton Rouge Hospital (1985)
19-year-old arrives at ER with stab wounds to the neck.
Copyright © 2023 by Jones & Bartlett Learning, LLC an Ascend Learning Company. www.jblearning.com
Surgery: Sponge and Instrument Count
Dr. Smith owns the local outpatient surgery center.
He instructs employees to count all instruments and surgical sponges following a surgical procedure, prior to closing the surgical site.
Annie, an employee, failed to conduct the count following Bill’s surgery.
Two months later, Bill, suffering from extreme abdominal pain, was noted to have several sponges and an instrument in his abdomen, which had caused him to develop a massive infection.
Will Dr. Smith be liable for Annie’s negligence?
Copyright © 2023 by Jones & Bartlett Learning, LLC an Ascend Learning Company. www.jblearning.com
Decision: Sponge and Instrument Count
Yes!
Even though Annie had strict instructions to count the sponges and surgical instruments prior to closing the surgical site, she failed to do so.
To determine otherwise would undermine the doctrine of vicarious liability, because employers would almost always escape liability by presenting evidence that employees were given careful instructions.
Copyright © 2023 by Jones & Bartlett Learning, LLC an Ascend Learning Company. www.jblearning.com
Review Questions (1 of 2)
Describe the objectives of tort law.
Explain the difference between negligence and malpractice.
Describe the elements of a negligence that the plaintiff must establish in a negligence suit.
Copyright © 2023 by Jones & Bartlett Learning, LLC an Ascend Learning Company. www.jblearning.com
Review Questions (2 of 2)
Describe the importance of causation in establishing liability in a negligence suit.
Explain the importance as to how foreseeability applies in a malpractice case.
Copyright © 2023 by Jones & Bartlett Learning, LLC an Ascend Learning Company. www.jblearning.com