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The Effect of the Treatment Setting on the Decision-Making Process: Acute Care Hospitals and Emergency Services
Published online by Cambridge University Press: 29 April 2021
Extract
This paper discusses the obligation of acute care hospitals and emergency services to treat patients. Since care rendered in these settings is, of necessity, provided by health care professionals, not buildings or programs, the obligation may be twofold. First, are there obligations for hospitals and emergency services to offer treatment? Second, do health care professionals practicing in these settings have an independent obligation to treat? How has the Supreme Court decision in Cruzan affected these obligations?
The tradition in this country has been that private hospitals had no obligation to treat patients, as opposed to public hospitals which were frequently set up for the very purpose of treating patients who had no other access to care. Over the years, statutes and case law have limited the rights of private hospitals and physicians to refuse to treat patients.
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- Copyright © American Society of Law, Medicine and Ethics 1991
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