- Pregnant patients' rights in the United States
Pregnant
patient s' rights regarding medical care during thepregnancy andchildbirth cite encyclopedia | last = Ammer | first = Christine | title = Pregnant patient's rights | encyclopedia = Encyclopedia of Women's Health, The | edition = Fifth Edition | pages = pp. 320-321 | publisher = Facts on File, Inc. | location = New York | date = 2005 | id = ISBN 0-8160-5790-7 ] are specifically a patient's rights within a medical setting and should not be confused withpregnancy discrimination . A great deal of discussion regarding pregnant patients' rights has taken place in theUnited States .History
In Western countries, medical services used during labor and delivery have increased since the 1930s. Starting in the 1950s, with the
natural childbirth movement gaining strength, concern increased over typical hospital practices during childbirth. These medical services included medications and procedures that were not always necessary, some of which had potential to harm the mother, the baby, or both. Various health-related and consumer organizations groups began to advocate for a pregnant woman's right to be informed about medical services related to pregnancy and childbirth and for her right to refuse such services.In the
United States , theAmerican College of Obstetricians and Gynecologists (ACOG) acknowledged the legal obligation of physicians to obtaininformed consent for procedures related to pregnancy and childbirth in 1974.cite web | url = http://www.aimsusa.org/ppbr.htm | title = The Pregnant Patient's Bill of Rights | last = Haire | first = Doris | publisher = Alliance for the Improvement of Maternity Services | date = 2000 | accessdate = 2007-08-13 ]Decision-making regarding pregnant patients' care
A 1987 study found that in the preceding decade, at least 22 hospitals in the United States sought direction from the courts regarding care for pregnant patients. Fifteen court orders were sought, all but one without careful study of the legal facts of the case.cite journal | title = The Rights of Pregnant Patients: Carder Case Brings Bold Policy Initiatives | url = http://advocatesforpregnantwomen.org/main/publications/articles_and_reports/the_rights_of_pregnant_patients_carder_case_brings_bold_policy_initiatives.php | journal = HealthSpan | volume = 8 | issue = 5 | date = 1991 | last = Thornton | first = Terry E. | coauthors = Lynn Paltrow | accessdate = 2007-08-13 ]
In a landmark 1990 case,
George Washington University Medical Center (GWUMC) announced a new policy regarding pregnant patients' rights as part of the out-of-court settlement of a case in which a pregnant patient,Angela Carder , died. The new policy stated that decisions regarding medical care for pregnant patients would be made by the patient herself, her doctors, and her family, not by the courts. Although the settlement applied only to GWUMC, the new policy, considered the most comprehensive of its kind at the time, was expected to influence other institutions. [cite news | last = Greenhouse | first = Linda | publisher =The New York Times | title = Hospital Sets Policy on Pregnant Patients' Rights | url = http://query.nytimes.com/gst/fullpage.html?sec=health&res=9C0CE7DE1139F93AA15752C1A966958260 | date =November 29 ,1990 | accessdate = 2007-08-13 ]pecific rights advocated
Advocates endorse a pregnant patient's right to participate in medical decisions that may affect her well-being and that of her child. Specifically, these include but are not limited to the right to know the effects and risks to both the woman and the child associated with a drug or procedure, as well as the right to know about additional and alternative treatments.
Some groups, such as the
American Hospital Association in its "Patient's Bill of Rights", advocate additional rights, including rights to the following:
*To receive medical assistance regardless of where the patient gives birth (whether at home, in ahospital , etc.).
*To refuse drug treatment of any kind.
*To be accompanied during labor and birth by a person or persons she cares for and to whom she looks for emotional support.
*To labor at her own pace without intervention if she chooses.
*To choose her ownbirthing position .
*To keep her baby at her bedside immediately after birth if the baby does not require specialized care, and to feed the baby according to a schedule she decides rather than according to a standard hospital regimen.ee also
*
Patient advocacy
*Patient empowerment
*Pregnant patients' rights , which addresses the subject throughout the world
*Women's rights References
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