Bill Text: OR HCR1 | 2013 | Regular Session | Introduced
Bill Title: Affirming inviolable nature of doctor-patient relationship.
Spectrum: Partisan Bill (Democrat 8-0)
Status: (Failed) 2013-07-08 - In committee upon adjournment. [HCR1 Detail]
Download: Oregon-2013-HCR1-Introduced.html
77th OREGON LEGISLATIVE ASSEMBLY--2013 Regular Session NOTE: Matter within { + braces and plus signs + } in an amended section is new. Matter within { - braces and minus signs - } is existing law to be omitted. New sections are within { + braces and plus signs + } . LC 2486 House Concurrent Resolution 1 Sponsored by Representative TOMEI, Senators ROSENBAUM, DINGFELDER; Representatives DOHERTY, GELSER, VEGA PEDERSON, WILLIAMSON, Senator STEINER HAYWARD (Presession filed.) SUMMARY The following summary is not prepared by the sponsors of the measure and is not a part of the body thereof subject to consideration by the Legislative Assembly. It is an editor's brief statement of the essential features of the measure as introduced. Affirms inviolable nature of doctor-patient relationship and right of patients to self-determination and bodily autonomy. CONCURRENT RESOLUTION Whereas the sanctity of the doctor-patient relationship is a fundamental tenet of health care in the United States; and Whereas all people have a right to expect that they will receive health information and care that is evidence-based and medically appropriate; and Whereas discussions between a health care provider and a patient, which are based on trust, privacy and open and candid communication, are the foundation of the doctor-patient relationship; and Whereas health care providers should have the ability to communicate freely with their patients and provide information about the health and safety of their patients without intrusion by government or other third parties; and Whereas patients are most vulnerable when confronted with difficult medical decisions, and health care providers must therefore be able to assist patients with their decision making free from value judgments or political influences; and Whereas health care providers must not be forced to choose between practicing medicine in accordance with the standard of care and medical ethics or in accordance with the law; and Whereas laws should not interfere with the doctor-patient relationship by preventing health care providers from freely discussing medical care and procedures with patients or providing information to patients; and Whereas laws that interfere with the doctor-patient relationship can also interfere with patient safety and with the patient's ability to access adequate medical information; and Whereas laws that prescribe elements of counseling or care can create a conflict between the health care provider's obligation to the patient and the health care provider's obligation to the law; and Whereas patients have a right to self-determination and bodily autonomy; and Whereas medical tests and procedures can provide vital information for patients and their health care providers, and this information should support the patient, help the patient make decisions and enable the patient to pursue health and well-being; and Whereas patients should not be forced to undergo tests or interventions that violate the patient's values, are not medically necessary, are not supported by scientific evidence or could expose the patient to unnecessary risk; and Whereas laws should not direct health care providers to provide specified information or perform specified tests that are not medically necessary; and Whereas mandated ultrasounds represent a dangerous intrusion into patient privacy and encroach on the doctor-patient relationship, interfering with a health care provider's ability to make sound clinical judgments based on medical reasoning and in the best interests of the patient; and Whereas the imposition of a medically unnecessary waiting period for any legal medical procedure encroaches on the doctor-patient relationship and prevents health care providers from acting in the best interests of their patients; now, therefore, Be It Resolved by the Legislative Assembly of the State of Oregon: That we, the members of the Seventy-seventh Legislative Assembly, affirm a health care provider's right and duty to provide patients with truthful, uninhibited and medically appropriate information under the doctor-patient relationship without intrusion; and be it further Resolved, That a health care provider's ability to act in a patient's best interests should be preserved; and be it further Resolved, That health care providers should not be forced to direct patients to undergo medically unnecessary tests or procedures, such as transvaginal ultrasounds, or to provide medically inaccurate information, and should not otherwise delay or deny care for nonmedical reasons; and be it further Resolved, That health care providers should not be asked to compromise their medical judgment when it comes to decisions about the provision of information and treatment that is in the best interests of the patient; and be it further Resolved, That we, the members of the Seventy-seventh Legislative Assembly, do not condone interference in the doctor-patient relationship. ----------