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. 1986 Jun;10(6):52-7.

Legal doctrines associated with medical malpractice

  • PMID: 10314631

Legal doctrines associated with medical malpractice

J Kircher. Physician Assist. 1986 Jun.

Abstract

Malpractice is the legal charge against a professional accused of a private wrong. Claims must be filed under tort (or civil) law; specific statutes can vary from state to state. Legal doctrines associated with malpractice include respondeat superior, which places ultimate liability with a superior or employer; proximate cause, which states that the professional's negligence resulted in injury; and res ipsa loquitur, which allows malpractice to be proved without expert testimony. Traditionally, PAs have been protected by respondeat superior; however, while some legal precedents have assigned liability to the physician entirely, others have distributed it proportionately between the supervised nonphysician provider and the physician. Consequently, no clear guidelines exist for PAs regarding malpractice, since the degree of liability has not yet been definitely decided by the courts. However, in the current legal climate, more and more PAs assume malpractice liability, and are providing for personal coverage.

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