• @[email protected]
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    1 month ago

    EMTALA does not apply once the patient has been admitted to the hospital. It applies to ER care only.

    There is no medicolegal standard for “life-threatening” That determination is, to a degree, subjective.

    In many cases, a patient will come to the ER in a non life threatening clinical state and get sicker following admission. EMTALA no longer applies to these patients.

    If, in retrospect, a doctor performs an abortion and its decided that the mother’s life was not at risk, they face a felony charge.

    Per the Texas Supreme Court, exceptions apply only when death or serious physical impairment is imminent (which is probably too late to save the patient and have a good functional outcome, unfortunately)

    The problem here is legislation. There is no medical error. Practitioners are making a risk-benefit assessment and choosing not to martyr themselves.

    I feel that you’re not familiar with medical practice and are oversimplifying a very complex issue.

      • @[email protected]
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        21 month ago

        I’m going to leave it at this: Doctors and lawyers know more about this than you or I do and it borders on conspiracy peddling to think that not saving a life is being done through simple negligence here.

        That particular case needs to be fleshed out in court and may well be an anomaly but there’s a reason she is not the only one and the source of that is in the legislature.