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1. The patient has the right to considerate
and respectful care.
2. This office will provide a base for
understanding and respecting the rights and
responsibilities of patients, their
families, doctors, and other caregivers.
3. This office will be aware and respectful
of cultural, racial, language, religious,
age, gender, and other differences as well
as the needs of persons with disabilities.
4. The patient has the right to and is
encouraged to obtain from doctors and other
direct caregivers appropriate, current, and
understandable information about diagnosis,
treatment, and prognosis. Except in
emergencies when the patient lacks
decision-making ability and the need for
treatment is urgent, the patient is entitled
to the chance to discuss and request
information about the specific procedures
and/or treatments, the risks involved, the
possible length of recuperation, and the
medically reasonable alternatives and their
risks and benefits. Patients have the right
to know the identity of doctors, nurses, and
others involved in their care, as well as
when those involved are students, patients,
or other trainees. The patient also has the
right to know the immediate and long-term
financial implications of treatment choices,
insofar as they are known.
5. The patient has the right to make
decisions about the plan of care before and
during treatment. The patient has the right
to refuse a recommended treatment or plan of
care to the extent allowed by law and
hospital policy and to be informed of the
medical consequences of this action. In case
of refusal, the patient is entitled to other
appropriate care and services that the
hospital provides or transfers to another
hospital. The hospital should notify
patients of any policy that might affect
patient choice within the institution.
6. The patient has the right to have an
advance directive (such as a living will,
health care proxy, or durable power of
attorney for health care) concerning
treatment or designating a surrogate
decision maker with the expectation that the
hospital will honor the intent of that
directive to the extent permitted by law and
hospital policy. Health care institutions
must tell patients of their rights under
state law and hospital policy to make
informed medical choices, ask if the patient
has an advance directive, and include that
information in patient records. The patient
has the right to timely information about
hospital policy that may limit its ability
to implement fully a legally valid advance
directive.
7. The patient has the right to every
consideration of privacy. Case discussion,
consultation, examination, and treatment
should be conducted so as to protect each
patient's privacy.
8. The patient has the right to expect that
all communications and records related to
his/her care will be treated as confidential
by this office, except in cases such as
suspected abuse and public health hazards
when reporting is permitted or required by
law. The patient has the right to expect
that this office will stress the
confidentiality of this information when it
releases it to any other parties entitled to
review information in these records.
9. The patient has the right to review the
records about his/her care and to have the
information explained or interpreted as
necessary, except when restricted by law.
10. The patient has the right to expect
that, within its capacity and policies, this
office will make reasonable response to a
patient's request for appropriate and
medically indicated care and services. The
hospital must provide evaluation, service,
and/or referral as indicated by the urgency
of the case. When medically appropriate and
legally permitted, or when a patient has
requested, a patient may be transferred to
another facility. The institution to which
the patient is to be transferred must first
have accepted the patient for transfer. The
patient must also have the benefit of
complete information and explanation
concerning the need for, risks, benefits,
and alternatives to such a transfer.
11. The patient has the right to ask and be
informed of business relationships among the
hospital, educational institutions, other
health care providers, or payers that may
influence the patient's treatment and care.
12. The patient has the right to consent to
or decline to take part in research studies
or human experimentation affecting care and
treatment or requiring direct patient
involvement, and to have those studies fully
explained prior to consent. A patient who
declines to take part in research or
experimentation is entitled to the most
effective care that the hospital can
otherwise provide.
13. The patient has the right to expect
reasonable continuity of care when
appropriate and to be informed by doctors
and other caregivers of available and
realistic patient care options.
14. The patient has the right to be informed
of this facilities policies and practices
that relate to patient care treatment, and
responsibilities. The patient has the right
to be informed of available resources for
resolving disputes, grievances, and
conflicts, such as ethics committees,
patient representatives, or other mechanisms
available in the institution. The patient
has the right to be informed of the
hospital's charges for services and
available payment methods. |