“Curbside” Consultation and Informal Communication in Medical Practice: A Medicolegal Perspective

In assessing whether a consulting physician is liable as a result of an informal (“curbside”) communication, courts examine all of the facts and circumstances to determine if a physician-patient relationship existed. Merely answering a colleague's question or performing a curbside consultation...

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Veröffentlicht in:Clinical infectious diseases 1996-09, Vol.23 (3), p.616-622
Hauptverfasser: Fox, Barry C., Siegel, Michael L., Weinstein, Robert A.
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container_title Clinical infectious diseases
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creator Fox, Barry C.
Siegel, Michael L.
Weinstein, Robert A.
description In assessing whether a consulting physician is liable as a result of an informal (“curbside”) communication, courts examine all of the facts and circumstances to determine if a physician-patient relationship existed. Merely answering a colleague's question or performing a curbside consultation may not give rise to a physician-patient relationship; hence, there is no liability. When duty of care can be established, a physician may be liable for medical malpractice. Infectious diseases physicians with contractual managed-care roles may have an unrecognized duty of care and may actually be at increased risk of liability. Physicians are also under duty to act as any reasonably prudent person would act on the basis of any foreseeable risk of injury to others. In general, physicians should encourage formal consultation when expert advice is sought because a more reliable and complete exchange of information occurs before an opinion is rendered in this setting. While informal interchange between colleagues is often of educational benefit, consultants should avoid giving specific advice about a patient whom they have not examined, answer queries in general terms, and consider keeping a written record of the interaction.
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source Jstor Complete Legacy; Oxford University Press Journals All Titles (1996-Current); MEDLINE; Elektronische Zeitschriftenbibliothek - Frei zugängliche E-Journals
subjects Biological and medical sciences
Communication
Duty of care
General aspects
Human infectious diseases. Experimental studies and models
Infectious diseases
Informal communication
Jurisprudence
Malpractice
Medical sciences
Medical specialists
Medicolegal Case Reviews
Physician-Patient Relations
Physicians
Plaintiffs
Primary health care
Reasonable care
Referral and Consultation
Telephones
title “Curbside” Consultation and Informal Communication in Medical Practice: A Medicolegal Perspective
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