W3TORTS-DAMAGES (1)
W3TORTS-DAMAGES (1)
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Torts
are civil wrongs that are done to clients
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Medical Malpractice
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Nursing Malpractice
• Any professional misconduct, or a
bad skillful practice, or any practice
contrary to law or established rules
and regulations whereby the health
of a person is injured.
12/17/2024 4
Four Elements Involved:
1.Duty
2. Breach
3. Injury
4. Proximate Causation
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Four Elements Involved:
1.Duty
- medical practitioners have a duty to use
at least the same level of care that any
other competent medical practitioner
would use to treat a condition under the
same circumstances
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Four Elements:
2. Breach
- breach of professional duties of
skill and care, or their improper
performance constitutes actionable
malpractice
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Four Elements:
3. Injury
- results from want of due care or
skill, the surgeons may be held
answerable and damages for
negligence may be claimed
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Four Elements:
4. Proximate Causation
- divided in 2 inquiries:
a. the actions in fact caused the harm and
b. these were the proximate cause of the
injury
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Article 2176 of the Civil Code
Vicarious Liability
obligation is demandable not only for
one’s own acts or omissions, but also for
those of persons for whom one is
responsible
used to explain the legal responsibility
one party may hold for actions that cause
harm, even if they aren’t the party that
directly caused the harm.
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Respondent Superior
•The master, principal or employer is
responsible for the wrongful acts of his
servant, or employee in certain cases.
•“Captain of the Ship”
NURSING JURISPRUDENCE 11
Duties expected from hospitals under the
Doctrine of Corporate Responsibility:
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Duties expected from hospitals under the
Doctrine of Corporate Responsibility:
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Res Ipsa Loquitor
- the thing speaks for itself
- requisites:
the accident is of a kind which ordinarily does
not occur in the absence of someone’s
negligence
It is caused by an instrumentality within the
exclusive control of the defendant
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Force Majeure
irresistible
Superior force
Events not foreseeable or avoidable
Act of God
Damages
•Pecuniary compensation,
recompense
•Satisfaction for an injury sustained
•Consequences which the law
imposes for the breach of some duty
or the violation of some right
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Damnum Absque Injuria
- damage without injury
- damage results from a person
exercising his legal rights
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Actual Damages
- loss suffered by a party as he has
duly proved
- cannot be granted unless
supported by the evidence on
record
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Moral Damages
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CRIMES
RELATED TO
NURSING PRACTICE
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A. Crimes Against
Public Interest
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1. Falsification by Public Officer
Counterfeiting or imitating any
handwriting, signature
Causing it to appear that persons
have participated in any act or
proceeding when they did not in fact
so participate
Making untruthful statements in a
narration of facts
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Altering true dates
Issuing in an authenticated form a
document purporting to be a copy of
an original documents when no such
original exists
Intercalating instrument or note relative
to the issuance thereof in a protocol,
registry or official book
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Elements of Falsification by Public
Officer/Employee
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False Medical Certificates
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B. Crimes Against Persons
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Crimes Against Persons
Parricide
any person who shall kill his father,
mother, child or spouse
Homicide
Any person who shall kill another without the
attendance of any of the following
circumstances
1. that a person was killed
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Homicide
2. That the accused killed him without any
justifying circumstances
3. That the accused had the intention to kill,
which is presumed
4. That the killing was not attended by any of
the qualifying circumstances of murder, or
by that of parricide or infanticide
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Giving Assistance to Suicide
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Euthanasia
- is the practice of painlessly
putting to death a person suffering
from some incurable disease
- when someone other than the
patient ends the patient’s life as
painlessly as possible out of mercy
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What is the difference between
Assisted Suicide and
Euthanasia?
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Places where it is Legal
1.Netherlands
2.Belgium
3.Switzerland
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Infanticide
any person who shall kill any child
less than 3 days of age
If committed by the mother for the
purpose of concealing his
dishonor, shall be punished of
prison mayor
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Infanticide
if committed by mother for concealing her
dishonor – prison mayor
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Elements of Infanticide
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Intentional Abortion
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Abortion
•Termination of pregnancy before the
age of viability (first 12-24 wks or 3-6
mnths)
•Unintentional (miscarriage) or
intentional
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Abortion
expulsion of the product of conception
before the child is viable (first 3 months)
Miscarriage
2nd trimester to viability
Premature Delivery
period of viability to fullterm
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Unintentional Abortion
penalty of prison correccional
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Elements of Unintentional Abortion
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Abortion Practiced by a Physician
and Dispensing of Abortives
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Crimes Against Person
Mutilation
• Penalty of reclusion temporal to
perpetua
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Kinds of Mutilation
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Elements of Mutilation of Some
Essential Organ for Reproduction
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Serious Physical Injuries
• Any person who shall wound, beat, or assault
another person
Penalty:
1. Prison mayor – cause insane, imbecile, impotent
or blind
2. Prison correccional – lost the use of speech,
power to hear or smell, lost an eye, hand, foot,
arm, leg
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Serious Physical Injuries
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Elements of Administering Injurious
Substance or Beverages
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Less Serious Physical Injuries
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Slight Physical Injuries and Maltreatment
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Anti – Rape Law of 1997
RA no. 8353
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Rape Victim Assistance and
Protection Act of 1998
RA no. 8505
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3. Assisting
rape victims in the investigation to
hasten the arrest of offenders and the filing
of cases in court
4. Ensuring the privacy and safety of rape
victims
5. Providing psychological counseling and
medical services
6. Adopting and implementing programs for
the recovery of rape victims
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C. Crimes
Against Honor
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Libel
• Is public and malicious imputation of a crime, or a
vice or defect tending to cause dishonor, discredit
• Committed by means of writing, printing,
engraving, radio, painting
• Penalty prison correccional
Slander by Deed 62
NURSES and EVIDENCES
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Evidence
• Is the means of
ascertaining in a judicial
proceeding the truth
respecting a matter of fact
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Evidence
Evidence 65
Presentation of Expert
Testimony
Inquire about
1. academic background on the subject
2. his experience, training
3. professional standing
4. relative objectivity of his views
5. degree of concordance of his
views with the facts proved
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B. ADMISSIBILITY OF EXPERT WITNESS
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C. ASKING OF HYPOTHETICAL QUESTIONS