The Emergency Medical Treatment & Active Labor Act (EMTALA) is a healthcare law specific to screening, stabilizing, and transferring (or accepting) patients with emergency medical conditions and active labor. This law, contextual to Medicare-participating hospitals, ensures public access to emergency medical services, regardless of the individual's ability to pay. The Defensive Medicine (DM) model and Physician Responsiveness to Standard-of-care Reforms (PRSRs) model are two medical malpractice frameworks leveraged in this paper.
View Article and Find Full Text PDFThe concept of physicians referring patients to their own healthcare entities is considered a "self-referral". A discerning factor of a self-referral is when the physician has a financial interest in the entity of patient referral. Prospects of healthcare overutilization and costs, thereby, rise.
View Article and Find Full Text PDFThe definition of defensive medicine has evolved over time given various permutations and combinations. The underlying meaning, however, has persisted in its relevance towards two classifications, positive and negative defensive medicine. Positive defensive medicine is specific to overutilization, excessive testing, over-diagnosing, and overtreatment.
View Article and Find Full Text PDFServices provided by healthcare providers have been the subject matter of judicial review time and again. The Consumer Disputes Redressal Commissions have laid down decisively what is and what is not 'deficiency' in the services provided by a healthcare provider. 'Deficiency' means, any fault, imperfection, shortcoming or inadequacy in the quality, nature, and manner of performance that is required to be maintained by or under any law for the time being in force or has been undertaken to be performed by a person in pursuance of a contract or otherwise, in relation to any service.
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