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100

This is a written (or verbal) agreement after adequate information is provided. An example would be something that the technologist must have a patient fill out before an invasive procedure.

Informed Consent

100

Being financially or legally responsible for something is the definition for:

Liability

100

Developed to aid in ethical problem-solving for imaging professionals

DOWD Model

100

This type of communication includes eye contact, touching, facial expressions, physical appearance, body language, and gestures.


Non-Verbal

100

Evaluates the good of an activity by assessing whether immediate harm is balanced with a future benefit. 

Bases decisions on the consequences or outcomes of a given act. 

Consequentialism

200

This type of law focuses on disputes between parties, negligence, and malpractice.

Civil (tort) law

200

Inappropriate use of physical restraints may constitute what?

False Imprisonment

200

This is the term for patients allowing death by refusing needed treatment.

Passive Suicide

200

Failing to provide reasonable care and caution. An example would be forgetting to put up bed rails and your patient falls.


Negligence

200

A legal doctrine meaning “the thing speaks for itself.

Res ipsa loquitor

300

This type of law focuses on offenses against the state, such as assault or theft.

Criminal Law

300

Examines the significance of actions themselves.

Bases decision-making on individual motives and morals rather than consequences

Deontology 

300

This term defines a patient's written wishes for future care.

Living Will (Advanced Directive)

300

The ethical principle of doing good and acting in the best interest of the patient.

Beneficence

300

Defines health care as a business relationship between the provider and patient

Contractual model

400

This type of tort is defined as a threat causing fear of unwarranted contact. An example would be approaching with barium after refusal.

Assault

400

This is the obligation to tell the truth.

Veracity

400

This term means reasonable anticipation of harm from actions.

Foreseeability

400

The ethical principle of avoiding harm to the patient.



Nonmaleficence

400

The concept that patients are to be treated as individuals and informed about procedures to facilitate appropriate decisions

Autonomy

500

This type of tort is unconsented touching, such as performing a procedure without signed consent.

Battery

500

This doctrine means that the employer is liable for employee acts within the scope. “Let the master answer.”

Respondeat Superior

500

This is verbal or spoken defamation.

Slander

500

An agreement between the patient and health care provider often grounded in traditional values and goal

Covenantal model

500

Incorporates elements of consequentialism and deontology to provide a more holistic approach to solving ethical dilemmas.

Focuses on the use of practical wisdom for emotional and intellectual problem solving

Virtue Ethics