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"Plastic 'airways" "???? Could they be refering to oxygen mask? Cuz in my would an "airway" would be an ETT, requring a laryngoscope and specalized training to use.
"Plastic 'airways" "???? Could they be refering to oxygen mask? Cuz in my would an "airway" would be an ETT, requring a laryngoscope and specalized training to use.
Is there any legal requirement for a physician to respond to an emergency like this?
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Of course not. This ain't France where every schmoe is expected to be a "Good Samaritan." This is the United States of Frigginmerica. You can choose to be apathetic and not give a rat's *** about anyone, as the Bill of Rights allows you this.
I'm sure you're probably just trying to make a point about the state of things in terms of lawsuits these days. However, if you were serious I think these doctors would be covered by good samaritan laws which would protect them from prosecution. Otherwise doctors on planes would just sit there and let the mess unfold for fear of a bad outcome and lawsuit.
No the Good Sameritan law DOES NOT protect doctors who publicly identified themselves as physicians. Once you identify yourself as a licenced physician, the victim automaticly becomes YOUR PATIENT, and you MUST render medical care.
No the Good Sameritan law DOES NOT protect doctors who publicly identified themselves as physicians. Once you identify yourself as a licenced physician, the victim automaticly becomes YOUR PATIENT, and you MUST render medical care.
895.48 Civil liability exemption; emergency care, athletic events health care, hazardous substances and information concerning paternity.
(1) Any person who renders emergency care at the scene of any emergency or accident in good faith shall be immune from civil liability for his or her acts or omissions in rendering such emergency care. This immunity does not extend when employees trained in health care or health care professionals render emergency care for compensation and within the scope of their usual and customary employment or practice at a hospital or other institution equipped with hospital facilities, at the scene of any emergency or accident, enroute to a hospital or other institution equipped with hospital facilities or at a physicians office.
Is it really this cut and dried? I certainly don't know much about it, but I was under the impression that the training/licensure conferred obligations to act in certain circumstances. Obviously in a professional capacity, physicians cannot choose not to help (ie - failing to respond to a code if you are on the code team). It wouldn't have suprised me at all if someone had said that "failure to render aid in an emergency situation" was grounds for having your license pulled.
Is it really this cut and dried? I certainly don't know much about it, but I was under the impression that the training/licensure conferred obligations to act in certain circumstances. Obviously in a professional capacity, physicians cannot choose not to help (ie - failing to respond to a code if you are on the code team). It wouldn't have suprised me at all if someone had said that "failure to render aid in an emergency situation" was grounds for having your license pulled.
M.D. plates? $45.
And it's mad props for the Five-Ohs when they pull your a$$ over for going "a little over the speed limit." 🙂
Getting overcharged at your next oilchange: $60
Getting cut-off by some ghetto low-life to provoke an accident with a 'rich doctor': priceless.
In my days, the on-call residents covering various hospitals had laminated cards from the hospital to put under the windshield. The local meter maids and cops would honor those cards. That way you didn't need the MD plates but where able to use the 'doctors vehicle only' spots.
There actually used to be a mechanism through the NY medical society that allowed you to make tickets 'go away magically' if you could provide some reasonable evidence that you were 'heading to the hospital to attend a patient'. Oh, the good old days.
That's not what the Wisconsin statute
It is not that simple. This is an article by a Wisconsin lawyer analyzing the case "Mueller v. McMillian Warner Insurance Co"
http://www.wisbar.org/AM/Template.cfm?Section=Home&TEMPLATE=/CM/ContentDisplay.cfm&CONTENTID=66146
His conclusions:
"When no emergency care is provided, a caregiver cannot receive the immunity provided under the Good Samaritan statute. A Good Samaritan can make the initial evaluation, and offer immediate assistance, treatment, and intervention to an injured person. But then, after that emergency care is provided, the injured person is to be transferred to professional medical personnel. If no medical transfer is made, the Good Samaritan immunity law exemption no longer applies."
So this means that, if in Wisconsin, you failed to provide emergency care, then you cannot receive the immunity provided under the Good Samaritan Statue.....So if the victim sued an MD who happened to be at the scene of the accident for failing to provide ER care, then that MD cannot receive the immunity provided under the Good Samaritan.
In reversing the circuit court's judgment, the court of appeals concluded:
"[W]hen theamaritan is a layperson, the intervention protected will ordinarily be of short duration and of an interim sort. Nothing in the statute suggests any intention that an ordinary person should make care-giving decisions any longer than the emergency situation necessitates . That nothing was done to make medical help available to Mueller for over six hours only underscores the fact that Stephani was not responding as if to an emergency. Based on the undisputed facts in this case, the Switlicks thus did not provide any care that would entitle them to immunity from liability under Wis. Stat. § 895.48."16
Brief History of the Good Samaritan Statute
On appeal, the Wisconsin Supreme Court noted that the original Good Samaritan statute, enacted in 1963,17 provided immunity only to medical professionals (doctors and nurses) who rendered emergency care.18 In 1977 a statute was adopted that extended Good Samaritan protection to laypersons.
No the Good Sameritan law DOES NOT protect doctors who publicly identified themselves as physicians. Once you identify yourself as a licenced physician, the victim automaticly becomes YOUR PATIENT, and you MUST render medical care.
Let me make myself clear. My argument is this...If a publicly known physician chooses not to render emergency care (in Wisconsin) while in a scene of an accident, and the victim (or victims family) knew that a publicly known physician was at that scene of that accident, would that publicly known physician receive the immunity provided under the Good Samaritan Statue if the victim (or victims family) sued that publicly known physician for failure to render emergency care?
Let me make myself clear. My argument is this...If a publicly known physician chooses not to render emergency care (in Wisconsin) while in a scene of an accident, and the victim (or victims family) knew that a publicly known physician was at that scene of that accident, would that publicly known physician receive the immunity provided under the Good Samaritan Statue if the victim (or victims family) sued that publicly known physician for failure to render emergency care?
In general, there's no duty for an ordinary person to help anyone else (unless it's an accident you yourself were involved in).

Hmmm, why then was Seinfeld, Elane, George, and Crammer jailed for refusing to help the fat man?![]()