Patient and Visitor Guide
Patient
Rights and Responsibilities
Individuals shall
have care provided based on clinical decision making according
to individual patient care needs. Patients
shall be given impartial access to treatment or accommodations
which are available or medically indicated, regardless
of race, creed, sex, national origin, resources of payment,
or how the hospital compensates or shares financial risk
with its leaders, managers, clinical staff, and licensed
independent practitioners. Patients at LRMC may expect consideration
of the following rights:
- The patient has the right to
considerate and respectful care. The
patient has a right to their personal, cultural, spiritual,
and/or ethnic beliefs and a right for these beliefs to be a consideration
in their care. At times this may not be possible due to
the patient care needs or condition, when possible, this
will be discussed with the patient and/or family or significant
other.
- The patient has the right to and is encouraged to obtain
from physicians and other direct caregivers relevant, current
and understandable information concerning diagnosis, treatment
and prognosis.
- Except in emergencies when the patient lacks
decision-making capacity and the need for treatment is urgent,
the patient is entitled to the opportunity to discuss and request
information related to the specific procedures and/or treatments,
the risks involved, the possible length of recuperation and
the medically-responsible alternatives and their accompanying
risks and benefits.
- Patients have the right to know
the identity of physicians, nurses and others involved in their
care, as well as when those involved are students, residents
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.
- The patient has the right to make
decisions about the plan of care prior to and during the course
of treatment, to refuse a recommended treatment or plan of
care to the extent permitted by law and hospital policy and
to be informed of the medical consequences of this action.
In case of such refusal, the patient is entitled to other appropriate
care and services that the hospital provides or transfer to
another hospital. The hospital should notify patients of any
policy that might affect patient choice within the institution.
- The
patient has the right to have an Advance Directive (such
as a living will, healthcare proxy or durable power of
attorney for healthcare), with the expectation that the
hospital will honor the intent of that directive to the
extent permitted by law and hospital policy.
- An Advance Directive
states, in advance what kind of treatment you want or do
not want, under special, serious medical conditions that
would keep you from telling your doctor how you want to
be treated.
- All adult patients admitted
to a healthcare facility in Florida, by law, must be
given the opportunity, to express their personal choices on
Advance Directives. At the time of your admission,
our admitting representative will provide you with
written information about Advance Directives. If
you have an Advance Directive, a copy may be made and
kept on file for future access.
- 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. Patients
may be treated as a “no publicity” patient upon their
request per the hospitals established “No Publicity
Policy.
- The patient has the right to expect
that all communications and records pertaining to his/her care
will be treated as confidential by the hospital, 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 the hospital will emphasize
the confidentiality of this information when it releases
it to any other parties entitled to review information
in these records.
- The patient has the right to review the
records pertaining to his/her medical care and to have the
information explained or interpreted as necessary, except when
restricted by law.
- The patient has the right to expect
that, within its capacity and policies, a hospital will make
reasonable response to the request of a patient 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
permissible, or when a patient has so 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 needs for risks, benefits,
and alternative to such a transfer.
- The patient must also have
the benefit of complete information and explanation concerning
the risks, benefits and alternative to such a transfer.
- The
patient has the right to ask and be informed of the existence
of business relationships among the hospital, education institutions,
other healthcare provides or payers that may influence the
patient’s
treatment and care.
- The patient has the right to expect reasonable
continuity of care when appropriate and to be informed by physicians
and other caregivers of available and realistic patient
care options when hospital care is no longer appropriate.
- The
patient has the right to be informed of hospital 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 and the patient has the right to take part
in considering ethical issues relating to their care. The
patient has the right to be informed of the hospital’s
charges for services and available payment methods.
- The patient
has the right to have his or her pain assessed and managed
appropriately, taking into account personal, cultural, spiritual
and/or ethnic beliefs.
- Communication…we recognize the patients have the right
to expect unrestricted access to communication. If it is
necessary to restrict visitors, mail, telephone calls or other
forms of communication as a component of care the patient will
be included in the decision. These rights can be executed
on the patient’s behalf by a designated surrogate or proxy
decision-maker if the patient lacks decision-making capacity,
is legally incompetent or is a minor.
- LRMC/TVRH
are Joint Commission Accredited Hospitals. If
you have any concern about patient care and safety, please
contact the hospital’s management. If your concerns are not
addressed by the hospital, you may call the Joint Commission’s
Office of Quality Monitoring at 1-800-994-6610 or e-mail
them at complaint@jointcommission.org.
- The
patient has the right to a timely acknowledgement and response
to any grievance that is submitted to organizations Team Members.
- The
patient has the right to be free from all forms of abuse or
harassment
Rights Specific to Children and Adolescents
- Children
have the right to have a patient, relative, guardian, or other
person assuming the parenting role staying with them during
the course of hospitalization. Such
individuals shall also have unlimited visitation rights
as long as such visitations do not interfere with the provision
of care.
- Children and adolescents have the right to expect that
all aspects of their care will be delivered taking into consideration
age specific needs, in a safe environment
- Children and adolescents
have a right to wear appropriate personal clothing as long
as it does not interfere with the provision of patient care.
- Children
and adolescents have a right to request and receive, if available,
their favorite foods at mealtime or as a snack or nourishment
providing such foods are consistent with the physician’s
nutritional orders.
- Children or adolescents who are expected
to remain tin the Hospital for a prolonged period of time have
a right to have their education needs assessed by the Hospital
staff who will also implement an appropriate educational
plan in cooperation with the child’s parent or guardian
and the school system.
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