Shri Mahesh Prasad Aggarwal
v/s M/s. Kamayani Patients
Care India Ltd
The National Consumer
Commission held that a doctor / hospital treating a patient or giving first aid
does not have to maintain medical records of that patient if the patient is not
hospitalized.
The Indian Medical
Council (Professional Conduct, Etiquette and Ethics) Regulations, 2002 lays
down that “Every physician shall maintain the medical records pertaining to his
/ her indoor patients for a period of 3 years from the date of commencement of
the treatment”.
Thus Hospitals or
nursing homes are bound to prepare, preserve and provide medical records of
only those patients who are hospitalized and none else.
In Shri Mahesh Prasad Aggarwal
v/s M/s. Kamayani Patients
Care India Ltd., the patient was on his way to Agra when his vehicle
overturned. He was rushed to a nearby hospital where he was examined by
doctors, CT scan and x-ray were done, and his hand was plastered. In the
meantime the patient’s father and younger brother, a doctor having his own
nursing home in Agra, arrived and the patient was taken away to his home. The
family then decided to shift the patient to Delhi, but he died in the ambulance
in transit.Patient’s family alleged negligence in
treating and also in failure to give proper documents at discharge.
Hospital stated that the
statutory provisions regarding maintaining medical records or giving documents
at discharge were applicable only for indoor patients. In this case the patient
was merely given first aid. It was further pointed that the patient was advised
hospitalization but his family took him away.
National Consumer Commission
held that the patient was never admitted in the hospital and hence the relevant
regulations did not apply. The Commission held that there was nothing wrong if
the hospital did not maintain record of the patient who was given first aid but
never hospitalized.
3 comments:
Documentation should not be avoided in any case, even when emergency care or first aid is given and the patient is not admitted. Many a times Court decisions are controversial.
Such decision will give a wrong signal to the doctors/ hospitals who will avoid proper documentation in case of first aid / treatment but not hospitalized.
I agree with Dr Singh. Every medical procedure adopted in a HCO small or big must have documentation. If there is no law, let there be one soon. Or forget Quality or Standard, for these shall be alien terms for doctors! - Dr Pancholi, M.D.(Ayu), PhD, MBA(Hosp.Mgmt)
Thanks for sharing your blog is creating awareness about what can happen with us due to medical negligence.. we are losing our love once due to this reason i think we all should be aware about medico legal because medico legal experts can handle malpractice cases...
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