-
When an admitted patient is boarded in the ED for extended periods, there may be confusion over who is responsible for the patientis it the ED physician, the hospitalist, the surgical specialist, or the medical specialist?
-
Administering medication in the emergency department (ED) or prescribing medication upon discharge exposes the ED physician to liability. When there are resultant complications, side effects, or injury as a result of a medication, lawsuits often are filed. This article will discuss the ED physician's duty to warn and will provide general guidelines on whether a pharmacist or a physician will assume liability in a given situation.
-
After a lawsuit is filed alleging poor care of a boarded patient is not the time to figure out who was legally responsible.
-
Two of the American College of Emergency Physicians (ACEP)'s policies address the issue of who is responsible for inpatients being held in EDs. The October 2007 policy, "Responsibility for Admitted Patients" recognizes that the patient benefits when there is a clear delineation of who is responsible for the patient's care.
-
William Sullivan, DO, JD, FACEP, director of emergency services at St. Margaret's Hospital in Spring Valley, IL, and a practicing attorney, helped an ED physician defend a case involving a patient who died after being boarded in the ED for more than 5 hours. The ED physician stated that the admitting physician accepted responsibility for the patient. The admitting physician denied responsibility since the patient was not admitted to the floor.
-
-
-
-
Debate exists over the use of certain medications in rapid sequence induction (RSI) for critically ill patients requiring intubation.
-
Fever has been recognized as a symptom of illness for centuries. It is especially concerning when it is associated with a young infant.