Helped transfer patients move in and out of beds, baths, wheel chairs and automobiles.
· Provided transportation, assistance, and companionship to clients.
· Provide life support services during medical emergencies on scene and en-route to the hospital.
· Maintain a state of readiness and alertness for all assignments.
· Collect pertinent information from the patient, family and friends, medical records and prescriptions.
· Strictly protected the confidentiality of all information related to patient care activities and EMS operations.
· Rapidly assessed whether life threatening criteria were present and took immediate action.
· Interacted with patients, families, and hospital staff.
· Assisted EMT’s with supplying them with the tools needed
Confidentiality is a concept of vast importance for professionals in the medical field. It is a professional obligation in this field and is considered to be an ethical concept that falls in line with integrity, compassion, veracity, charity, and fidelity as explained in both the International Council of Nurses Code for Nurses (1973) and the American Nurses Association Code of Ethics (1985). However, in today’s ever growing world of technology and demand for information, challenges continue to arise that force doctors and nurses to reexamine virtues such as confidentiality.
It is extremely important to ensure confidentiality so that no staff, child or family member gets excluded in any situation.
Roles and responsibility of the work are adhered to. Personal information about patient are kept confidential except where it is necessary with other staff that care for the same patient or to the health care team attending to them.
In the health care business, there are certain standards and laws that have been put in place to protect our patients and their personal health information. When a health care facility fails to protect their patient’s confidential information, the US Government may get involved and facilities may be forced to pay huge sums of money in fines, and risk damaging their reputation.
CCC staff are expected to treat all Protected Health Information (“PHI”) and Personally Identifiable Information ( ”PII”) in any form (paper, electronic, or verbal) as confidential in accordance with government regulations and are not to divulge PHI unless the patient, or a legally authorized representative has properly authorized a release of information, or as otherwise permitted or required by law. CCC staff will only release the minimum amount of information necessary to fulfill a
Confidentiality is of utmost importance regarding all areas of care. Confidentiality for the residents includes their information, their finances and care
The nurse protected the patient’s privacy and promoted confidentiality by keeping the patients information safe.
Confidentiality in the Healthcare arena can be simply defined as the moral and ethical duty of the Practitioner to keep all the patient’s bio-data under lock and key, and offer a disclosure of those facts that the patient is legally mandated to disclose or deems fit to enhance their positive health outcome. According to the Segen’s Medical Dictionary, “Confidentiality is the ethical principle that a physician may not reveal any information disclosed in the course of medical care, unless the patient who disclosed that information poses a threat to him, herself or others’’
Confidentiality Issues: all patient information must be kept confidential and shared only with the appropriate staff involved in the care of the patient. Patient records must be kept out of sight so that for example the cleaning crew cannot look at it and other patients cannot view it. Discussing the case with anyone outside the medical office. HIPAA is for the protection, use, and disclosure of protected health information (Ramutkowski, Booth, Pugh, Thompson, &, 2008).
It is the medical office specialist duty to protect all PHI by keeping it private and secure.
Healthcare providers are required to protect health information such as verbal, paper, or electronic that relates to the past, present, or future health of an individual, both mental and physical, and even when an individual is deceased, this information is known as Protected Health Information (PHI). Protected Health Information created or received by a Covered Entity or Business Associate is protected by the HIPAA Privacy Rule. Healthcare team members and Business Associates have varying levels of access to Protected Health Information. Medical and technical healthcare members each have certain responsibilities, an example of this would be, Medical Assistants may read, but not create or modify the PHI in electronic health records/electronic
As regionalized ICU care is more common in modern healthcare interhospital transfers of critically ill patients may influence costs both at the referring centre as well as at the referral centre. In case there is no surcharge funding for transferred patients referral centres may encounter underfunding as demonstrated by a study performed in such a referral centre among 569 consecutive patients admitted to a tertiary care ICU from April 1, 1997, to March 30, 2000 [ ]. Crude comparison of directly admitted and transfer patients revealed that transfer patients had significantly higher APACHE III scores (mean, 60.5 vs. 49.7, p < .001), ICU mortality (14% vs. 8%, p < .001), and hospital mortality (22% vs. 14%, p <
In response to the question posed by Dr. Kohring, patient identifiable information must be protected especially when using an electronic method to transmit or obtain the information
Confidentiality: The principle of confidentiality is to remain confidential to patients and their information (Yoder-Wise, 2015). Confidentiality is one of the core duties of medical practice which requires health care providers to keep a patient’s personal health information private unless consent to release the information is provided by the patient (De Bord, Burke, & Dudzinski,
The confidentiality of patient visits and medical records are essential in providing the highest quality of health care. Under penalty of law, a patient's medical records or any other information regarding the patient may only be released with his or her authorization. Exceptions to this are certain cases specified by law for example, health care providers are required to report certain communicable diseases such as measles. Many organizations and laws have been developed to maintain patient's rights of confidentiality and access to their medical record. Guided by the principle that confidentiality is essential in developing strong trust between patients and healthcare providers, the