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1.
J Am Coll Emerg Physicians Open ; 5(2): e13130, 2024 Apr.
Article in English | MEDLINE | ID: mdl-38481521

ABSTRACT

This article provides a brief review of moral and legal duties to respect confidentiality in emergency medicine. The article considers current challenges to confidentiality in emergency departments and proposes strategies to address them. It is offered as an update of the two-part review of confidentiality in emergency medicine in 2005 by Moskop et al published in 2005 in Annals of Emergency Medicine.

2.
J Emerg Med ; 64(6): 740-749, 2023 06.
Article in English | MEDLINE | ID: mdl-37268477

ABSTRACT

BACKGROUND: Pandemics with devastating morbidity and mortality have occurred repeatedly throughout recorded history. Each new scourge seems to surprise governments, medical experts, and the public. The SARS CoV-2 (COVID-19) pandemic, for example, arrived as an unwelcome surprise to an unprepared world. DISCUSSION: Despite humanity's extensive experience with pandemics and their associated ethical dilemmas, no consensus has emerged on preferred normative standards to deal with them. In this article, we consider the ethical dilemmas faced by physicians who work in these risk-prone situations and propose a set of ethical norms for current and future pandemics. As front-line clinicians for critically ill patients during pandemics, emergency physicians will play a substantial role in making and implementing treatment allocation decisions. CONCLUSION: Our proposed ethical norms should help future physicians make morally challenging choices during pandemics.


Subject(s)
COVID-19 , Moral Obligations , Physicians , Humans , COVID-19/epidemiology , Pandemics , Triage
4.
HEC Forum ; 2022 Dec 22.
Article in English | MEDLINE | ID: mdl-36547791

ABSTRACT

Civility is an essential feature of health care, as it is in so many other areas of human interaction. The article examines the meaning of civility, reviews its origins, and provides reasons for its moral significance in health care. It describes common types of uncivil behavior by health care professionals, patients, and visitors in hospitals and other health care settings, and it suggests strategies to prevent and respond to uncivil behavior, including institutional codes of conduct and disciplinary procedures. The article concludes that uncivil behavior toward health care professionals, patients, and others subverts the moral goals of health care and is therefore unacceptable. Civility is a basic professional duty that health care professionals should embrace, model, and teach.

6.
Clin Pract Cases Emerg Med ; 5(4): 385-389, 2021 Nov.
Article in English | MEDLINE | ID: mdl-34813425

ABSTRACT

INTRODUCTION: During protests following the death of George Floyd, kinetic impact projectiles (KIP) were used by law enforcement as a method of crowd control. We describe the injuries seen at a single Level 1 trauma center in Los Angeles over a two-day period of protests to add to the collective understanding of the public health ramifications of crowd-control weapons used in the setting of protests. CASE SERIES: We reviewed the emergency department visits of 14 patients who presented to our facility due to injuries sustained from KIPs over a 48-hour period during civil protests after the death of George Floyd. CONCLUSION: Less lethal weapons can cause significant injuries and may not be appropriate for the purposes of crowd control, especially when used outside of established guidelines.

7.
J Am Coll Emerg Physicians Open ; 1(1): 38-45, 2020 Feb.
Article in English | MEDLINE | ID: mdl-33000012

ABSTRACT

The duty to report certain conditions to public health or law enforcement authorities is one that falls on all physicians and other health care workers as part of their duty to protect the public from harm. In an open society, others, such as teachers, clergy, police officers, or simply neighbors, share the responsibility of protecting individuals at risk, often by reporting them to authorities. The emergency physician and others in the emergency department are uniquely positioned to identify people at risk or who pose a risk, and to report them as required or allowed under the law. In some circumstances, these duties may conflict with ethical duties such as respect for patient autonomy or to protect confidentiality. This article will examine mandatory and permissive reporting laws in various states from an ethical perspective. It will also explore emerging issues such as the reporting of suspected human trafficking.

8.
J Am Coll Emerg Physicians Open ; 1(4): 403-407, 2020 Aug.
Article in English | MEDLINE | ID: mdl-33000063

ABSTRACT

Emergency physicians face real-time ethical dilemmas that may occur at any hour of the day or night. Hospital ethics committees and ethics consultation services are not always able to provide immediate responses to emergency physicians' consultation requests. When faced with an emergent dilemma, emergency physicians sometimes rely on risk management or hospital counsel to answer legal questions, but may be better served by real-time ethics consultation. When other resources are not immediately available, emergency physicians should feel confident in making timely decisions, guided by basic principles of medical ethics. We make the following recommendations: (1) availability of a member of the hospital ethics committee to provide in-person or telephonic consultation concurrent with patient care; (2) appointment to the hospital ethics committee of an emergency physician who is familiar with bioethical principles and is available for consultation when other ethics consultants are not; and (3) development of educational tools by professional societies or similar organizations to assist emergency physicians in making reasoned and defensible clinical ethics decisions.

9.
Am J Emerg Med ; 37(12): 2248-2252, 2019 12.
Article in English | MEDLINE | ID: mdl-31477361

ABSTRACT

Emergency physicians, organizations and healthcare institutions should recognize the value to clinicians and patients of HIPAA-compliant audiovisual recording in emergency departments (ED). They should promote consistent specialty-wide policies that emphasize protecting patient privacy, particularly in patient-care areas, where patients and staff have a reasonable expectation of privacy and should generally not be recorded without their prospective consent. While recordings can help patients understand and recall vital parts of their ED experience and discharge instructions, using always-on recording devices should be regulated and restricted to areas in which patient care is not occurring. Healthcare institutions should provide HIPAA-compliant methods to securely store and transmit healthcare-sensitive recordings and establish protocols. Protocols should include both consent procedures their staff can use to record and publish (print or electronic) audiovisual images and appropriate disciplinary measures for staff that violate them. EDs and institutions should publicly post their rules governing ED recordings, including a ban on all surreptitious or unconsented recordings. However, local institutions may lack the ability to enforce these rules without multi-party consent statutes in those states (the majority) where it doesn't exist. Clinicians imaging patients in international settings should be guided by the same ethical norms as they are at their home institution.


Subject(s)
Emergency Service, Hospital/ethics , Video Recording/ethics , Confidentiality , Emergency Service, Hospital/legislation & jurisprudence , Health Insurance Portability and Accountability Act , Humans , Informed Consent , United States , Video Recording/legislation & jurisprudence
10.
Acad Emerg Med ; 26(11): 1245-1254, 2019 11.
Article in English | MEDLINE | ID: mdl-31166061

ABSTRACT

Sexual harassment is a serious threat to a safe and productive workplace. The emergency department (ED) environment poses unique threats, including stress, time constraints, working in close physical proximity, and frequent personal contacts with staff, colleagues, consultants, and difficult patients. Sexual harassment must be recognized and addressed in individual cases, in policy and in law, to protect staff members and patients. This article addresses the scope of the problem of sexual harassment known to date. It describes the ED environment and culture and why they may be conducive to harassment or abusive behavior. The authors examine relationships among staff, legal and regulatory issues, and strategies for prevention and remediation of inappropriate behavior. The article ends with a call for future research.


Subject(s)
Emergency Medicine , Sexual Harassment/prevention & control , Emergency Service, Hospital/organization & administration , Female , Humans , Male , Sexual Harassment/legislation & jurisprudence
11.
Ann Emerg Med ; 74(3): 357-364, 2019 09.
Article in English | MEDLINE | ID: mdl-30579619

ABSTRACT

This article revisits the persistent problem of crowding in US hospital emergency departments (EDs). It begins with a brief review of origins of this problem, terms used to refer to ED crowding, proposed definitions and measures of crowding, and causal factors. The article then summarizes recent studies that document adverse moral consequences of ED crowding, including poorer patient outcomes; increased medical errors; compromises in patient physical privacy, confidentiality, and communication; and provider moral distress. It describes several organizational strategies implemented to relieve crowding and implications of ED crowding for individual practitioners. The article concludes that ED crowding remains a morally significant problem and calls on emergency physicians, ED and hospital leaders, emergency medicine professional associations, and policymakers to collaborate on solutions.


Subject(s)
Crowding , Emergency Service, Hospital/standards , Emergency Medicine/standards , Emergency Service, Hospital/legislation & jurisprudence , Emergency Service, Hospital/trends , Humans , Quality of Health Care/standards , United States
12.
Ann Emerg Med ; 70(1): 86-92, 2017 Jul.
Article in English | MEDLINE | ID: mdl-28110993

ABSTRACT

Requests for observation experiences are common in the emergency department and other medical settings. There is little guidance in the literature or in professional societies' polices about who should be granted this privilege. This article reviews the ethical and legal issues that should be taken into account when one decides whether to allow observers in the medical setting. At the heart of the issue is patient privacy. This article recommends that institutions have policies in place that address these activities and suggests content for such policies.


Subject(s)
Emergency Service, Hospital/ethics , Ethics, Medical , Health Personnel/ethics , Patient Satisfaction , Confidentiality , Guideline Adherence , Health Services Research , Humans , Policy Making , Societies, Medical , Students, Medical
13.
Ann Emerg Med ; 68(5): 589-598, 2016 11.
Article in English | MEDLINE | ID: mdl-27181079

ABSTRACT

Prescription drug monitoring programs are statewide databases available to clinicians to track prescriptions of controlled medications. These programs may provide valuable information to assess the history and use of controlled substances and contribute to clinical decisionmaking in the emergency department (ED). The widespread availability of the programs raises important ethical issues about beneficence, nonmaleficence, respect for persons, justice, confidentiality, veracity, and physician autonomy. In this article, we review the ethical issues surrounding prescription drug monitoring programs and how those issues might be addressed to ensure the proper application of this tool in the ED. Clinical decisionmaking in regard to the appropriate use of opioids and other controlled substances is complex and should take into account all relevant clinical factors, including age, sex, clinical condition, medical history, medication history and potential drug-drug interactions, history of addiction or diversion, and disease state.


Subject(s)
Drug Utilization Review/ethics , Emergency Service, Hospital/ethics , Prescription Drugs/therapeutic use , Humans , Prescription Drug Misuse/prevention & control , Prescription Drugs/adverse effects
14.
Ann Emerg Med ; 68(5): 599-607, 2016 11.
Article in English | MEDLINE | ID: mdl-27157455

ABSTRACT

Emergency physicians frequently interact with law enforcement officers and patients in their custody. As always, the emergency physician's primary professional responsibility is to promote patient welfare, and his or her first duty is to the patient. Emergency physicians should treat criminals, suspects, and prisoners with the same respect and attention they afford other patients while ensuring the safety of staff, visitors, and other patients. Respect for patient privacy and protection of confidentiality are of paramount importance to the patient-physician relationship. Simultaneously, emergency physicians should attempt to accommodate law enforcement personnel in a professional manner, enlisting their aid when necessary. Often this relates to the emergency physician's socially imposed duties, governed by state laws, to report infectious diseases, suspicion of abuse or neglect, and threats of harm. It is the emergency physician's duty to maintain patient confidentiality while complying with Health Insurance Portability and Accountability Act regulations and state law.


Subject(s)
Emergency Medicine/legislation & jurisprudence , Law Enforcement/ethics , Confidentiality/ethics , Criminals/legislation & jurisprudence , Emergency Medicine/ethics , Emergency Service, Hospital/ethics , Emergency Service, Hospital/legislation & jurisprudence , Humans , Mandatory Reporting/ethics , Physician-Patient Relations/ethics , Prisoners/legislation & jurisprudence , Safety
15.
Acad Emerg Med ; 22(5): 605-15, 2015 May.
Article in English | MEDLINE | ID: mdl-25903144

ABSTRACT

The 2014 outbreak of Ebola virus disease (EVD) in West Africa has presented a significant public health crisis to the international health community and challenged U.S. emergency departments (EDs) to prepare for patients with a disease of exceeding rarity in developed nations. With the presentation of patients with Ebola to U.S. acute care facilities, ethical questions have been raised in both the press and medical literature as to how U.S. EDs, emergency physicians (EPs), emergency nurses, and other stakeholders in the health care system should approach the current epidemic and its potential for spread in the domestic environment. To address these concerns, the American College of Emergency Physicians, the Emergency Nurses Association, and the Society for Academic Emergency Medicine developed this joint position paper to provide guidance to U.S. EPs, emergency nurses, and other stakeholders in the health care system on how to approach the ethical dilemmas posed by the outbreak of EVD. This paper will address areas of immediate and potential ethical concern to U.S. EDs in how they approach preparation for and management of potential patients with EVD.


Subject(s)
Bioethics , Disease Outbreaks/prevention & control , Emergency Medical Services/ethics , Emergency Service, Hospital/ethics , Hemorrhagic Fever, Ebola/prevention & control , Emergency Medicine , Ethics, Medical , Ethics, Nursing , Humans , Societies, Medical/ethics , Societies, Nursing/ethics , United States
16.
J Emerg Nurs ; 41(2): e5-e16, 2015 Mar.
Article in English | MEDLINE | ID: mdl-25770003

ABSTRACT

The 2014 outbreak of Ebola Virus Disease (EVD) in West Africa has presented a significant public health crisis to the international health community and challenged US emergency departments to prepare for patients with a disease of exceeding rarity in developed nations. With the presentation of patients with Ebola to US acute care facilities, ethical questions have been raised in both the press and medical literature as to how US emergency departments, emergency physicians, emergency nurses and other stakeholders in the healthcare system should approach the current epidemic and its potential for spread in the domestic environment. To address these concerns, the American College of Emergency Physicians, the Emergency Nurses Association and the Society for Academic Emergency Medicine developed this joint position paper to provide guidance to US emergency physicians, emergency nurses and other stakeholders in the healthcare system on how to approach the ethical dilemmas posed by the outbreak of EVD. This paper will address areas of immediate and potential ethical concern to US emergency departments in how they approach preparation for and management of potential patients with EVD.


Subject(s)
Disease Outbreaks/ethics , Emergency Medicine/ethics , Emergency Nursing/ethics , Emergency Service, Hospital/ethics , Hemorrhagic Fever, Ebola/therapy , Physicians/ethics , Hemorrhagic Fever, Ebola/nursing , Humans , Societies, Medical , Societies, Nursing , United States
17.
Am J Emerg Med ; 33(6): 822-7, 2015 Jun.
Article in English | MEDLINE | ID: mdl-25616586

ABSTRACT

Ambulance diversion is a common and controversial method used by emergency departments (EDs) to reduce stress on individual departments and providers and relieve mismatches in the supply and demand for ED beds. Under this strategy, ambulances bound for one hospital are redirected to another, usually under policies established by regional emergency medical services systems. Other responses to this mismatch include maladaptive behaviors (such as "boarding" in "hallway beds") and the development of terminology intended to normalize these practices, all of which are reviewed in this article. We examine the history and causes of diversion as well as the ethical foundations and practical consequences of it. We contend that (1) from a moral viewpoint, the most important stakeholder is the individual patient because diversion decisions are usually relative rather than absolute; (2) decisions regarding ambulance diversion should be made with careful consideration of individual patient preferences, local and state emergency medical services laws, and institutional surge capacity; and (3) authorities should consider the potential positive effects of a regional or statewide ban on diversion.


Subject(s)
Ambulance Diversion/ethics , Emergency Service, Hospital/ethics , Crowding , Decision Making/ethics , Humans , Surge Capacity
19.
Ann Emerg Med ; 64(2): 140-4, 2014 Aug.
Article in English | MEDLINE | ID: mdl-24743101

ABSTRACT

Since its original development in Oregon in 1993, Physician Orders for Life-Sustaining Treatment (POLST) is quickly growing in popularity and prevalence as a method of communicating the end-of-life care preferences for the seriously ill and frail nationwide. Early evidence has suggested significant advantages over advance directives and do-not-resuscitate/do-not-intubate documents both in accuracy and penetration within relevant populations. POLST also may contribute to the quality of end-of-life care administered. Although it was designed to be as clear as possible, unexpected challenges in the interpretation and use of POLST in the emergency department do exist. In this article, we will discuss the history, ethical considerations, legal issues, and emerging trends in the use of POLST documents as they apply to emergency medicine.


Subject(s)
Emergency Medicine/ethics , Life Support Care/ethics , Physicians/ethics , Resuscitation Orders/ethics , Advance Care Planning/ethics , Advance Care Planning/legislation & jurisprudence , Emergency Medicine/legislation & jurisprudence , Emergency Service, Hospital/ethics , Emergency Service, Hospital/legislation & jurisprudence , Humans , Life Support Care/legislation & jurisprudence , Physicians/legislation & jurisprudence , Resuscitation Orders/legislation & jurisprudence , United States
20.
J Emerg Med ; 44(2): 352-4, 2013 Feb.
Article in English | MEDLINE | ID: mdl-23116933

ABSTRACT

BACKGROUND: Acute calcific tendinitis, a benign and self-limiting inflammatory condition commonly seen in the shoulder, is also described in many other tendons, including those in the hand and wrist. When involving the wrist, acute calcific tendinitis is often misdiagnosed and mistaken for infection. OBJECTIVE: We present this case to increase familiarity with this condition to avoid errors in diagnosis resulting in inappropriate treatment with antibiotics or even surgery. CASE REPORT: A 27-year-old man presented to the Emergency Department with a 2-week history of volar wrist pain, with sudden increase in pain associated with chills and new onset swelling and redness of the wrist. Plain radiographs showed characteristic soft-tissue calcification overlying the insertion of the flexor carpi ulnaris tendon into the wrist. Treatment with ibuprofen and splinting resulted in complete symptom resolution. CONCLUSION: Acute calcific tendinitis is an important consideration in the differential diagnosis of acute wrist pain. Radiographs are helpful in confirming the diagnosis when symptoms and examination findings are characteristic.


Subject(s)
Calcinosis/diagnosis , Tendinopathy/diagnosis , Wrist Joint/physiopathology , Acute Disease , Adult , Anti-Inflammatory Agents, Non-Steroidal/therapeutic use , Arthralgia/etiology , Calcinosis/physiopathology , Calcinosis/therapy , Chills/etiology , Edema/etiology , Humans , Ibuprofen/therapeutic use , Lymphangitis/diagnosis , Lymphangitis/therapy , Male , Radiography , Splints , Tendinopathy/physiopathology , Tendinopathy/therapy , Wrist Joint/diagnostic imaging
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