English, asked by borabiva385, 11 months ago

Essay on doctors and the risk they take for human life......plz help​

Answers

Answered by sanjeevaarav910
2

Answer:

Taking risk in our life can lead to both happiness and sorrow.If we take risks then only we can lead.If we lead then only we can earn fame.

Taking risks does not means killing ourselves .We should take risks in all the positive sides where we will learn something and become knowledgeble.No one in this world become famous without taking any risk.In this world all the learned men became famous only by taking lots of shame and risks which was their medicine for earning fame.

"Take risks in your life"

If you win,You can lead

If you loose,You can guide

By Swami Vivekananda.

Answered by Anonymous
1

Answer:

What duties do doctors have toward their patients?

Doctors have many duties toward their patients. Their responsibilities cover their own actions, as well as orders they give to their assistants, such as nurses, medical students and residents.

These are a doctor's main duties:

Obligation to Diagnose and Treat Patients

In legal terms, doctors have an obligation of means toward their patients, not an obligation of result. This means that they have to take appropriate steps available to make the right diagnosis, provide treatment and follow-up on their patients' progress.

Doctors must base their actions on up-to-date scientific information and use recognized treatments in the right way.

They must treat their patients attentively and conscientiously.

Doctors must recognize their own limits: in case of doubt, they must get information from other people or refer patients to specialists.

The duty to treat patients includes the duty to

prescribe the right medication,

tell patients about the advantages, disadvantages, risks and alternatives regarding a proposed treatment or operation, and

provide adequate follow-up to the patient within a reasonable amount of time.

For example, after a treatment, a doctor must provide the medical follow-up required by the patient's state of health, or at least make sure that a colleague or other professional follows up.

Duty to Provide Information

Doctors must give their patients all the information they need to make free and informed decisions. For example, doctors must tell their patients about the following:

diagnosis

nature, goal and seriousness of the treatment

risks of the treatment

other treatment options

The doctor's duty to provide information also includes answering patients' questions.

The doctor's duty is toward the patients themselves, the people who make decisions on behalf of patients, or the parents of children under the age of 14.

Doctors must explain the chances of success and the risk of failure of the suggested treatment, keeping in mind the patient's specific condition.

Doctors must also inform their patients about the possible negative effects of a treatment. However, it is impossible for a doctor to talk about all of the possible risks; doctors must tell their patients about the foreseeable risks, in other words the risks that are most likely to occur. Doctors must also tell patients about any rare risk that could have serious consequences.

The extent of the duty to provide information depends on the circumstances and the patient in question.

For some types of treatments, doctors are required to give more complete and specific information about the risks. This is the case, for example, with purely experimental treatments as well as treatments that are not aimed at curing an illness or injury, like some types of plastic surgery. In these cases, doctors must tell patients about all possible and rare risks.

Duty to Make Sure the Patient Gives Free and Informed Consent

The reason behind the duty of doctors to provide information to patients is to give patients all the information they need to make free and informed decisions with full knowledge of the facts about the treatment and care offered. When a patient agrees to treatment or care, this is called consent.

The duty to get the consent of patients is a continuous process. This is why patients must be kept informed about any new information about their states of health and the treatments they are receiving.

Duty to Respect Confidentiality

Doctors have a duty to respect their patients' confidentiality. This is sometimes called the duty of professional secrecy.

This duty covers both the information patients tell their doctors and any facts doctors discover about their patients as part of the doctor-patient relationship.

Professional secrecy belongs to the patient, not the doctor. Doctors cannot reveal what their patients tell them, unless their patients waive the confidentiality of the information or if the law allows it. For example, the Public Health Act says that certain diseases must be reported to public health agencies.

Also, doctors can reveal some confidential information when they have very important and fair reasons to do so and these reasons relate to the health or safety of the patient or people close to the patient.

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