Ethics, Legal, and Health Insurance Flashcards

1
Q

What is beneficence?

A

a moral obligation of health care providers to act for the benefit of others

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2
Q

What is duty?

A

the obligations that individuals have to others in society

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3
Q

What is fidelity?

A

the moral duty to keep commitments that have been promised

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4
Q

What is justice?

A

the quality of being just and fair; righteousness

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5
Q

What is nonmaleficence?

A

the obligation of health care providers to do no harm

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6
Q

What is paternalism?

A

a term used when someone fails to recognize another individual’s right and autonomy

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7
Q

What is veracity?

A

obligation of health care providers to tell the truth

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8
Q

What is the Teleological Ethical Theory? (consequentialism)

A

the belief that the outcome or consequences of a particular action should come from answering the question “What should I do?”

Judging the good and bad outcome based on answering the questions “Which decision would bring the best consequences?”

If no clear answer is taken from those questions then the person does whatever will cause the most good with the least amount of harm

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9
Q

What is the Deontologism Ethical Theory?

A

theory that does not focus on consequences but rather if the action follows moral principles

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10
Q

What are the four elements of malpractice?

A
  • a duty to act in a particular manner
  • conduct that breaches that particular duty
  • damage that occurs from that conduct
  • conduct that is substandard, causing injury
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11
Q

What is a Managed Care health plan?

A

a concept of health care delivery where subscribers utilize health care providers that are contracted by the insurance company at a lower cost to attempt to provide the highest quality of care at the lowest price

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12
Q

What is a High Maintenance Organization health plan?

A

subscribers agree to receive all of their health care services through the predetermined providers of the HMO and their PCP manages health care access via referrals

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13
Q

What is a Preferred Provider Organization health care plan?

A

subscribers can choose from a list of approved providers that contract with the insurance plan

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14
Q

What is Medicare?

What are the two parts?

A

a health insurance plan run by the government for individuals over 65 and the disabled which is operated by the Centers of Medicare and Medicaid Services

Part A
Part B

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15
Q

What is the difference between Medicare Part A and Medicare Part B?

A

Part A- enrollment is automatic and funding is through payroll taxes

Part B- enrollment is voluntary and funding is through premiums paid by beneficiaries and general federal tax revenues

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16
Q

What is Medicaid?

A

An insurance plan that provides basic medical services for those who are economically lower class that is funded by the federal and state governments

17
Q

What is Primary Prevention Healthcare?

A

interventions that occur before the onset of disease or a condition with the goal of preventing disease/illness

examples: vaccines, healthy habit education, exercise, etc

18
Q

What is Secondary Prevention Healthcare?

A

Interventions to assist with early diagnosis and complication prevention of disease/illness or conditions

Examples: screening for adolescent scoliosis, blood glucose tests for diabetes, self breast cancer examinations, etc

19
Q

What is Tertiary Prevention Healthcare?

A

interventions trying to limit the long-term effects and symptoms of a disease/condition that has already occurred or is occurring

Examples: rehab after a spinal cord injury, HIV support groups, palliative care for end of life patients, etc.

20
Q

What is abandonment?

A

unacceptable one-sides termination of services by a health care professional without patient consent or agreement

21
Q

What is common law?

A

court decisions in the absence of statutory law

22
Q

What is malpractice?

A

failure to exercise the skills that would normally be exercised by other members of the profession with similar skills and training which can include negligence, breach of contract issues, and intentional conduct by a health care provider

23
Q

What is Negligence?

A

the failure to do what a reasonable and prudent person would ordinarily have done under the same or similar circumstances for a given situation

24
Q

What is a Tort?

A

a private or civil wrong or injury, involving omission and/or commission

25
Q

When can a PTA make modifications to a patient’s interventions?

A

When it is to progress the patient as directed by the PT or in order to insure safety and comfort

26
Q

What does general supervision from a PT mean?

A

PT does not need to be on site but does need to at least be available via telecommunications