Your links apply to living patients.
From your link:
yes and at the time the request was made, Jahi had not been declared legally dead.
Your links apply to living patients.
From your link:
Yup...totally agree. It's (death determination by a doctor) done every single minute of every single day. Legal death is determined at the time of death (or upon discovery of death), by the doctors examining the patient/body/corpse. In Jahi's case, the only thing the court did in this matter was issue a TRO to CHO, preventing the removal of the ventilator, to give Dolan and the family - at first - time to "grieve" over the Christmas holiday. It then turned into extending the TRO to allow an independent doctor (Dr. Fischer) to come in and make his own examination, at the insistence of the family. That of course still didn't satisfy the family, so the TRO got extended again to allow the family time to find a facility that would accept a brain dead body for further organ support.Pretty sure that it's not normal procedure to wait for a judge to proclaim someone is dead before hospitals consider their deceased patients deceased. Usually the patient is considered dead and treated accordingly straight after the doctors are done declaring death, without waiting for a judge's final word on the matter.
sbm red-ed bmYou have to make the request in writing. Which is apparently what Jahi's mother did if the transcribed statements up thread are accurate. She said she was only denied after the workers discovered she was requesting Jahi's records. Then, they refused citing some protocol that is in violation of both state and federal laws.
That's why consumer watchdog groups have been all over this case from the beginning.
JMO .... http://www.mercurynews.com/ci_25338082/jahi-mcmath-family-calls-state-report-b-s
Good question! I was curious about this, too. I hadn't heard any mention of specific "Consumer Watchdog" groups being involved here until that claim was just made a few hours ago.Consumer watchdog groups, plural? Which group, other than Jamie Court's 'Consumer Watchdog' group, has bn "all over this"?
What other 'consumer watchdog groups' have been 'all over this case from the beginning'?
Thx in adv.
http://www.thaddeuspope.com/Thaddeus Mason Pope is Director of the Health Law Institute and Associate Professor of Law at Hamline University. He is an Adjunct Professor with the Australian Centre for Health Law Research at Queensland University of Technology. He is Adjunct Associate Professor for the Alden March Bioethics Institute at Albany Medical College. In 2014, Professor Pope is chair-elect of the Association of American Law Schools (AALS) Section on Law, Medicine, and Health Care, and a member of the American Society of Bioethics & Humanities (ASBH) Program Committee.
The December 2014 issue of the Journal of Critical Care includes a special section titled "Death by Neurologic Criteria 1968 - 2014: Changing Interpretations."
Judging by the title of that article, I can only guess that it'll have something to do with furthering IBRF's campaign to "prove" they can reverse brain death. I'm sure it'll be at least a brow-raising read.I had never considered Thaddeus Mason Pope a consumer watchdog group. ...
His medical futility blog, the latest posting says Calixto Machado will be publishing an article in
"The December 2014 issue of the Journal of Critical Care includes a special section titled "Death by Neurologic Criteria 1968 - 2014: Changing Interpretations."
yes and at the time the request was made, Jahi had not been declared legally dead.
I had never considered Thaddeus Mason Pope a consumer watchdog group. It's true he has been following Jahi's case closely in his blog and we have all relied upon the court docs he has posted but it seems to me that he comes into this more from a medical-legal ethics standpoint than a consumer agenda. In any case, he's not a group, he's a person.
http://www.thaddeuspope.com/
His medical futility blog, the latest posting says Calixto Machado will be publishing an article in,
Just a thought here. If NW had asked for "all" the records pertaining to Jahi rather than a patient abstract, it would take more than the normal time to process, prepare, and deliver the documentation. Perhaps NW also needed her own records, since she was taken to CHO's emergency centre for treatment during Jahi's crisis in the ICU.
FWIW At CHO, a patient abstract includes:
1. A discharge summary for inpatients only
2. Emergency Record
3. History and Physical
4. Operative Report
5. Consultant Report
6. Test Results
7. Clinic Notes
8. Immunizations
(See http://www.childrenshospitaloakland.org/main/Medical-Records.aspx for more details.)
As well, the records would be made available to physicians or healthcare providers as needed for consultation or continuing care at no charge, and would ONLY be sent DIRECTLY to the physician or healthcare provider.
At the time her mother made the request for Jahi's medical records, she had not been declared legally dead by the Judge. The hospital continued to refuse to provide the records using the very illegal excuse she was still a patient. Later, probably realizing the hospital was breaking state and federal law, the hospital issued another statement saying the records were available.
JMO
http://www.childrenshospitaloakland.org/main/Response-to-Media-Coverage-Decemb2013.aspx
MEDIA STATEMENT
Children's Hospital & Research Center Oakland: Response to Consumer Watchdog press release of 12/18/13
As a matter of policy, we do not release the entire medical record while the patient is in the hospital, since it is a document in continuous use.
http://www.cnn.com/2013/12/20/health/california-girl-brain-dead/
Attorney Dolan said McMath's family has repeatedly asked doctors for the release of Jahi's medical records so he can hire an independent physician to determine whether she is legally dead. "Their response has been, 'It's not our policy while providing care,'" said Dolan.
In a statement, Children's Hospital denied the family's assertion. "Jahi's family has the same access to our medical records as the family of any patient at Children's. All families have the right to review the record while the patient is in the hospital, and have access to the entire record after the hospitalization has ended."
http://www.childrenshospitaloakland.org/main/Medical-Records.aspx#HowtoViewParent, guardians, or patients that are 18 or older may set up an appointment with the HIM department to come in and review their medical record at Children's.
Appointments are made during business hours.
Appointments will be scheduled within 5 business days of the request.
There is no charge to review your medical record at the HIM department.
I consider all medical journals, associations, bioethics professors of law, medicine, etc. who are watching and sharing information to be consumer watchdogs. Knowledge does impact the delivery of medicine to consumers.
JMO
Judging by the title of that article, I can only guess that it'll have something to do with furthering IBRF's campaign to "prove" they can reverse brain death. I'm sure it'll be at least a brow-raising read.
edit: looked into it myself, too:
Machado's contribution to it, according to Pope's writing, is: "Death as a biological notion
Calixto Machado"
I guess instead of proving a reversal of brain death, perhaps it will cover his extensive writings about the concept of "whole body death", as opposed to just "brain death"? Now I'm really looking forward to reading it. We already know he's been riding that train for some time now (if the rest of the body is alive, we can't call the person truly dead.)