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CAN IDOCHTOR TRET APACHENT THAT DOES NOT WONT TO BE TRETTED BY A SECRET WAY?

2006-08-05 02:46:33 · 16 answers · asked by pleasebenice 2 in Health General Health Care Other - General Health Care

can i doctor treat a peoson that does not wont to be treated in a secret way?

like if someone thinks the peosen has mental health probloms and the peoson wont see the doctor?

2006-08-05 02:53:09 · update #1

16 answers

It would be unethical and illegal to do so.
The patient has the right to make their own decisions unless they were incapacitated....in such cases the doctor still cannot make decisions unless it was an emergency...if there are instructions not to interfere, then they cannot go against those directions without a possibility of breaching their oath and law.

2006-08-05 02:53:05 · answer #1 · answered by Greg Hegler 2 · 5 1

If you're trying to ask, "Can a doctor treat a minor without parental consent?" the answer is yes, under certain circumstances. If the minor is emancipated (legally treated as an adult), needs emergent care if the situation is such to cause loss of life or limb, and usually, a minor by the age of 17 is able to be considered an "educated minor" in some states.

However, most doctors are very reluctant to treat other than emancipated minors for fear of lawsuits. In these instances, the need would have to almost certainly be proven to be fatal if not treated, and the burden of proof would be on the physician.

P.S. I can tell from the jist of your letter that you may have a problem writing in English. That's quite ok. You were able to make your point and the others who answered with snide remarks are the ignorant ones!

2006-08-05 10:37:09 · answer #2 · answered by Anonymous · 0 0

I'm having a little trouble understanding the question.

If a secret way means the doctor doing something to you without telling your parents the answer is no, unless you are old enough to give permission. And if the doctor is doing something you or your parents have not given permission for, something is wrong.

If a secret way means, can the doctor treat you for a mental illness even if you don't want hime to, the answer is it depends. If you are under 16 years old and the doctor has determined you are mentally or physically ill, he can discuss it with your parents and they can start a course of treatment whether you say ok or not. They are looking out for your well-being. But the doctor cannot treat someone under 16 if the parents don't give permission and the patient doesn't give permission.

2006-08-05 03:14:47 · answer #3 · answered by shirley_corsini 5 · 0 0

To be able to be treated in a secret way you have to see the doctor in the first place and even then any dealings he has with the patient is completely confidential.

It is one of the rules that all doctors and nurses have to abide by.
Patent confidentiality !!!

2006-08-05 03:03:10 · answer #4 · answered by Anonymous · 0 0

i'm not sure exactly what you're trying to say, but all physicians must take the hippocratic oath, which basically says that they will do everything that they can to help a patient survive. sometimes there are disputes between this and various cultures or religions. blood transfusions, for example are not used in some religions, which poses problems when one is taken to the hospital needing blood. the doctors are still forced to try to convince the family to allow blood transfusions.

2006-08-05 02:58:58 · answer #5 · answered by rodchesterkings 2 · 0 0

Nope. in basic terms positioned: they're bugs. they're so small and primitive relative to us that "recognize", like a brilliant sort of the worldwide around them, is going precise over their heads. particularly, your usual puppy or kitten or maybe human toddler has far extra occurring in its head than your usual insect does. bugs are particularly tiny residing robots--they eat, molt, strengthen, eat some extra, molt and strengthen some extra, breed and then die. And on the same time as there is larval ranges for some and problems for others, it is enormously solidly genuine of all of them. They do the corporation of existence virtually completely in a reflexive, mechanical way. And maximum vertebrate existence gets this: maximum land vertebrates kill regardless of bugs they run into (or eat them, as some birds, amphibians and reptiles do). Flies etc in specific have developed to reproduce by ability of the thousands just to make amends for that. there's a metaphor in here someplace, approximately trolls in this information superhighway, i'm specific. Or a minimum of the bots[*]. Pun meant.

2016-11-03 22:44:29 · answer #6 · answered by ? 4 · 0 0

Do you mean "Can a doctor treat a patient that does not want to be treated in a secret way?" - not without a court order authorising him/her to do so or he/she risk being charged with assault.

2006-08-05 02:53:40 · answer #7 · answered by Anonymous · 0 0

If you mean: Can a doctor see a person who does not want medical attention. Then I don't see how, every adult has the right to refuse treatment. Sorry

2006-08-05 02:53:54 · answer #8 · answered by Anonymous · 0 0

you can't treat a patient in a secret way as the patient has to give their permission and sign forms for procedures, I'm a nurse

2006-08-05 02:51:53 · answer #9 · answered by nursej 4 · 0 0

I can understand everything except being treated "by a secret way". What does that mean?

2006-08-05 02:51:27 · answer #10 · answered by Amanda R 4 · 0 0

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