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Journal Article

Citation

Felthous AR, Scarano VR. Tex. Med. 1999; 95(3): 72-78.

Affiliation

Chester Mental Health Center, IL 62233, USA.

Copyright

(Copyright © 1999, Texas Medical Assn)

DOI

unavailable

PMID

10932639

Abstract

Texas physicians do not have a statutory duty to warn potential victims of their patients' violent conduct but may warn medical or law enforcement authorities if the patient is a danger to himself, to the treating physician, or to others. Moreover, the Medical Practice Act of Texas does not authorize even permissive exceptions to confidentiality, thereby preventing physicians from legally warning victims. Nonetheless, 5 Texas appellate courts already have addressed a clinician's duty to issue protective warnings to reasonably identifiable victims. The approaches of these 5 courts have been similar, but important differences warrant attention. In 1998, the Supreme Court of Texas, in a fact-specific decision, did not adopt a duty for physicians to protect third persons from their patients' violent acts. All Texas physicians should become familiar with the emerging jurisprudence of professional protective responsibilities and liabilities to third persons who can be harmed physically by their patients' violent conduct.


Language: en

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