- Apr 1, 2003
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If a person sues a hospital for negligence, can the hospital retaliate by refusing to treat the person in the future? Like if the doctor wants to admit the person for a non-emergancy hosp. stay for routine tests?
Originally posted by: Alkesh
No, doctors have an oath.
Originally posted by: Injury
I'm pretty certain that in a non-emergency situation a hospital can choose who they want to treat.
They ARE a business, not a public service.
Originally posted by: Injury
I'm pretty certain that in a non-emergency situation a hospital can choose who they want to treat.
They ARE a business, not a public service.
Originally posted by: Hayabusa Rider
Originally posted by: Injury
I'm pretty certain that in a non-emergency situation a hospital can choose who they want to treat.
They ARE a business, not a public service.
They cannot refuse treatment. It is illegal.
Originally posted by: Hayabusa Rider
Originally posted by: Injury
I'm pretty certain that in a non-emergency situation a hospital can choose who they want to treat.
They ARE a business, not a public service.
They cannot refuse treatment. It is illegal.
Originally posted by: NiKeFiDO
Originally posted by: Hayabusa Rider
Originally posted by: Injury
I'm pretty certain that in a non-emergency situation a hospital can choose who they want to treat.
They ARE a business, not a public service.
They cannot refuse treatment. It is illegal.
depends on if its private vs public hospital.
Originally posted by: Hayabusa Rider
Originally posted by: Injury
I'm pretty certain that in a non-emergency situation a hospital can choose who they want to treat.
They ARE a business, not a public service.
They cannot refuse treatment. It is illegal.