Understanding patients' rights - Doctor holding the hand of a male patient in a hospital.

15 Things You Should Know About Your Rights as a Patient

It can be intimidating and confusing to seek out healthcare. However, as a patient, you have certain rights that keep you and your information protected. Here are ten things you should know about patients’ rights in healthcare:

1. You Have the Right to Be Treated Respectfully.

Regardless of health obstacles or disabilities, you should always be treated with respect. Discrimination based on race, gender, national origin, or anything else is not acceptable. Medical treatments can be very personal, and all healthcare providers should treat you with respect, especially during your most vulnerable moments. 

2. You Can Request Your Medical Records at Any Time.

You can request access to your medical records at any time. This includes your test results and other documentation included in your medical record. With electronic health records, access to your medical record is easier than ever. However, some providers may charge a fee. Check with your doctor’s office if you are unsure.  

3. Your Medical Records Should Be Kept Private.

Only you and your doctor, or another authorized healthcare practitioner in the same facility, have the right to see your medical records. In fact, there are substantial legal and monetary consequences if someone gains access to your medical records without your consent. Part of the relationship between the provider and the patient is trust, and you can trust that your medical team will keep your health information protected, unless it will harm someone or the public, for example. In this instance for example, the facility may have the right to break privacy rules. 

4. You Have the Right to Refuse Treatment.

You make the final decision regarding any treatment that you receive. You have the right to refuse care if you choose to do so. If the medical treatment goes against your beliefs or you simply don’t want it, you can refuse treatment. There are a few exceptions to this rule, such as in an emergency or life-threatening situation, or if you are not able to refuse care. By and large however, the final decision is left up to you and any other individuals that you may choose to consult with, such as members of your immediate family or close friends.

5. You have the Right to Informed Consent

Patients’ rights also include informed consent. Before undergoing treatment, you have the right to understand the risks and procedures involved in the treatment, especially if treatment involves undergoing a surgical procedure.

6. You Have the Right to Make an End-of-Life Care Decision

End-of-life care policies vary depending on the state, but you have rights that protect the way that you want to receive end-of-life treatment.

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7. You Can Request Not to Be Weighed

You can choose not to be weighed or you can choose not to have your weight spoken aloud. You can choose how the topic of your weight is handled in terms of discussion.

8. You Can Determine the Individuals Who Enter Your Room

At a general wellness exam or another general appointment, you can decide who comes into your room.

9. You Control Your Own Body.

If something is making you uncomfortable during your medical exam or visit to the hospital, you have the right to speak up and say something, so that the practitioner is aware and can stop immediately.

a close up shot of a woman holding a rosary while praying

10. You Can Have a Faith Representative.

Depending on religion, you might want to have a faith representative who helps you during the appointment or when making decisions relative to medical treatment.

11. You Have the Right to Information.

The medical standard of informed consent gives you the right to information about your care. Before you consent to a procedure or treatment, you should know the risks, benefits, and alternatives to any care that you are contemplating receiving.

12. You Have the Right to Timely Care.

When urgent care is required, you should have timely access to it. If it will not harm your health, longer wait times are acceptable. 

cheerful black patient talking with doctor in hallway of hospital

13. You Have the Right to Get a Second Opinion.

Because of your right to medical choice (right to refuse), you can get a second opinion, or several opinions if you like. 

14. You Should Have Collaborative and Continued Care.

If you require care from a second facility or provider, your original provider should share current treatments and chart notes. 

15. Your Provider Must Disclose Conflicts of Interest Affecting Your Care.

Physicians must share any financial or personal conflicts that may compromise their ability to provide care. 

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These patient rights help ensure that you have quality care and that the care has a minimal negative effect on the quality of your life. The rights stated above make medical care more ethical and humane for all patients.

If you’d like to know more about medical ethics and healthcare, follow the Avidity Medical Design Blog. For healthcare courses, visit Avidity Medical Design Academy. For candles and scented soaps with a healthcare theme, visit Avidity Medical SCENTations.

Welcome to Star Trek: 10 New Medical Devices of the Future

screenless displays

Ever watch the newest Sci-Fi episodes (or the older ones) and wonder why your own medical treatment couldn’t be that easy? Here are a few newer medical devices that will bring the futuristic medical treatments straight to your door.

1. The Bionic Eye

Recently in development, but not perfect, is the 3D printing of light receptors onto a glass eye. The silver, which they use as ink, stays where it is put on the rounded glass and produces electric feedback. It is moving on to the next stage of development and designed to increase eye comfort for patients.

2. 3D Print Sockets for Artificial Limbs

girl with curly blonde hair wearing red hoodie against red background holding prosthetic hands and arms together

In the United States, it is not difficult to have a socket fitted to an amputated limb by a person trained in prosthesis in any major city. With the help of cell phone scanning and a 3D printer, patients who live in other countries are receiving low-cost sockets for their amputated limbs. 

3. Contact Lenses For Blood Glucose

smart contact lenses

As the saying goes, “Eyes are the windows to the soul.” They can tell your doctor a thing or two if you are a diabetic. If you have been diagnosed with diabetes, these new “smart” contact lenses can detect and transmit your blood glucose level using your own tears.

4. Virtual Dissection Tables

If you are a student who is trying to learn about the human anatomy, watching a cadaver being dissected might be hard to handle. A new device, called a virtual dissection table, might make it easier. The virtual dissection table allows instructors to virtually dissect a human body, identify diseases, and teach surgical procedures without using a cadaver. 

5. Robotic Assistants

From training long-term residents to helping with physical therapy sessions, new medical devices in the form of robotic assistance have been used to move and assist patients with standing or transferring to wheelchairs. A robot is even being developed to draw blood or insert IVs with ultrasound enhanced vein targeting. 

6. Tattoos

Much like the continuous blood glucose sensors, these tattoos are placed on the body to transmit vital signs to medical devices for continuous monitoring. Biometric tattoos can transmit medical information discreetly, allowing for easier communication with physicians. 

7. Sensors in Teeth

You’re on a strict diet. You lie to your physician about how much you ate. With teeth sensors, those days are gone. These teeth sensors can be embedded in your teeth to determine what, how much, and when you ate. These sensors can even track when and how often you smoke. Your actions and intake are recorded and sent to a smart device, allowing your doctor to see real-time data. 

8. Printed Skin

photo of woman with dark skin wearing gold eyeshadow and lipstick looking down while against black background

If you are a burn victim, skin grafts have been made from the cells of burn victims using 3D printing, to give burn victims a better chance to recover without scars and skin graft rejections. The printed skin procedure also reduces the patient’s recovery time and the risk of infections. Printed skin grafts can be as small or as large as needed, without the skin being taken from other areas of the body.  

9. In Silico Clinical Trials

The medical community no longer recruits patients with certain diseases to try different medical treatments. Clinical trials are now taking place on silicon chips. These silicon chips are made to react like an organ, a drug, or a treatment, thereby reducing the need for human trials. 

10. The Medical ‘Tricorder’

young medical professional using clear tablet to study x-ray and other medical data

Still more futuristic than the present, the tricorder from the popular show Star Trek is in development. A contest is in place to see who can pull together the best functioning device that could scan a being and receive medical-grade information- more than just vital signs. 

The future is closer than we imagine, with only developers’ imaginations holding back their ingenuity. Many new medical devices are in development that will aid in our visits with physicians, treatments, and overall learning.  To keep up to date with medical advancements, follow the Avidity Medical Design Blog.