Ethical and Legal Issues in Employment and Research Flashcards

1
Q

(OSHA):

  • What does it stand for = ?
  • Ensures = ?
  • Standards include = ?

Ethical and Legal - Employment & Research

A

OccupationalSafety andHealth Act (OSHA):

(a) Occupational Safety and Health Act:

  • Passed in 1970 to prevent workers from being killed or otherwise harmed at work.
  • Ensures safe and healthful workingconditions for employees by setting and enforcingstandards and by providing training, outreach,education andassistance

(b) The standards include:

  • Requirements to provide fall protection
  • Creating emergency action plans
  • Limiting exposure to hazardous chemicals
  • Putting guards on machines to protect workers
  • Keeping record of workplace injuries and illnesses
  • Requiring the use of personal protective equipment (PPE)
  • Prevent trench cave-ins
  • Goal to reduce workplace hazards by requiringemployers to meet specified health and safetystandards.

(c) OSHA gives legal rights:

  • Workplaces must provide training for employees regarding workplace hazards.
  • Workers have the right to file a complaint with OSHA and theycannot be harmed by the employer for doing so.
  • If workers sincerely believe that a serious injury ordeath might occur because the work area isunsafe, they can refuse toworkand employers maynot retaliate.
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2
Q

What standard imposes requirements on employers of workers who have occupational exposure to blood = ?

Ethical and Legal - Employment & Research

A

Bloodborne Pathogens Standard:

(a) 1991 OSHA administered this standard

(b) Designed to protect workers from the risk of exposure to bloodborne pathogens:

  • Human Immunodeficiency Virus (HIV)
  • Hepatitis B Virus

(c )The standard imposes requirements on employers of workers who have occupational exposure to blood or other potentially infectious materials (certain tissues and body fluids).

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3
Q

A routine practice which should be conducted before every patient interaction to assess the likelihood of exposing yourself to infectious agents = ?

Ethical and Legal - Employment & Research

A

Point of CareRiskAssessment:

(a) Point of care risk assessment

  • A routine practice which should be conducted before every patient interaction to assess the likelihood of exposing yourself to infectious agents.
  • From a specific interaction:
    • E.g What task am I carrying out?
  • Clinical procedures/interactions, surgery
  • With a specific patient
  • E.g What is the patient’s health status or symptoms? And are they able to practice respiratory etiquette/hand hygiene?

(b) Notes:

  • Infants/young children, patients notcapable of hand hygiene or compliancewith respiratory hygiene.
  • In a specific environment
    • E.g where am I doing my task?
  • Single rooms, washrooms, hallway, publicareas, therapeutic departments,housekeeping, elevator.
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4
Q

Standard Precautions:

  • Define = ?
  • Includes = ?

Ethical and Legal - Employment & Research

A

Standard Precautions:

(a) OSHA and Centers for Disease Control (CDC) are the regulating bodies for infection control, prevention and awareness.

(b) Standard Precautions:

  • The basic, minimum level of infection control that should be used with all patients, all of the time.
  • Include a series of measures to preventdirect contact with body fluids, blood,secretions, excretions, and minimize thespread of infections associated withhealthcare.

(c) Notes:

  • Healthcareworkers need to apply standardprecautionswheneverproviding care,despite the patient’s diagnosis.
  • Cleaning hands is the most effectivemeasure to prevent the spread of infection.
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5
Q

Standard Precautions:

  • These minimum infection prevention steps include = ?

Ethical and Legal - Employment & Research

A

Standard Precautions:

(a) These minimum infection prevention steps include:

  • Hand hygiene
  • Use of appropriate Personal Protective Equipment (PPE)
  • Respiratory hygiene (covering your cough/sneeze)
  • Sharp object safety and proper disposal
  • Cleaning of supplies and disposal of waste

(b) In addition to Standard Precautions, higher levels of PPE are required for different precautions

  • E.g Droplet precautions, Contact precautions, Airborne precautions
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6
Q

Hand Hygiene:

  • Per the CDC, when should personnel use an alcohol-based hand rub or wash with soap and water = ?

Ethical and Legal - Employment & Research

A

Hand Hygiene:

(a) Per the CDC, personnel should use an alcohol-based hand rub or wash with soap and water in these key situations:

  • Immediately before touching a patient
  • Before performing an aseptic task (e.g. insertion of IV or catheter, preparing an injection)
  • After contact with the patient or patient’s immediate environment
  • After contact with blood, body fluids or contaminated surfaces
  • Before moving from a soiled body site to a clean body site on the same patient
  • After removal of gloves or other PPE
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7
Q

Personal Protective Equipment (PPE):

  • Purpose = ?
  • Types of PPE used in healthcare setting include = ?
  • Factors that influence PPE selection = ?

Ethical and Legal - Employment & Research

A

Personal Protective Equipment (PPE):

(a) Worn to minimize exposure to serious workplaceinjuries and illnesses.

(b) Types of PPE used in healthcare settings:

  • Gloves
  • Gowns/aprons
  • Masks and respirators
  • Goggles
  • Face shields

(c) Factors that influence PPE selection:

  • Type of exposure anticipated
  • Durability and appropriateness for the task
  • Fit
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8
Q

Risk Management:

  • Methods utilized to = ?
  • Risk management includes = ?

Ethical and Legal - Employment & Research

A

Risk Management:

(a) Meaning:

  • Methods utilized by health care organizations todefend their assets against the threats posed bylegal liability​

(b) Risk management includes the following:

  • Ensures PTs follow organizational policies
  • Equipment maintained
  • If injury, there should be medical responsesin place with policies/procedures forincident reports
  • Respect patient informed consent prior to anytouching, procedures,
    intervention,
    Appropriate supervision
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9
Q

Scientific Integrity and Experimentation:

  • The validity and usefulness of scientific studies depend on = ?.
  • Integrity in research requires = ?

Ethical and Legal - Employment & Research

A

Scientific Integrity and Experimentation:

  • The validity and usefulness of scientific studies depend on whether the researchers proceed with scientific integrity.

(a) Integrity in research:

  • Requires respect for others, honesty, fairness, decency, and moralconsistency

(b) Notes: “Integrity in Physical Therapy Research” by APTA states:

  • “A concernfor integrity in research follows quite naturally from the dualcommitment to research and professional ethics.”
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10
Q

Four components to scientific integrity = ?

Ethical and Legal - Employment & Research

A

Four components to scientific integrity:

(1) Respect for autonomy:

  • Shown by securing informedconsent from persons who participate in researchprojects.

(2) Justice:

  • Shown by a concern about who benefits fromscientific experimentation

(3) Humaneness:

  • Shown by acting with beneficence towardboth humans and research animals.

(4) Honesty:

  • Providing full disclosure of research findings aswell as giving proper credit to authors of publication.
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11
Q

Respect for autonomy in research requires = ?

  • The most important ethical considerationin experimentation on people = ?

Ethical and Legal - Employment & Research

A

Respect for Autonomy in Research:

(a) Core of scientific integrity in research onhumans

  • “Treat persons as autonomous rational beings who have their own purposesand never as mere means to reaching your ownpurposes.”
  • To ignore, undermine, or assault that autonomy is to degradepeople.

(b) Requires:

  • Voluntary Consent
  • Informed Consent
  • Competent to Consent
    • E.g.Alzheimer’s research, children

(c) Voluntary, informed consent is the most important, ethical considerationin experimentation on people.

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12
Q

Humaneness in Research:

  • Vital to act with beneficence and for research to not = ?
  • Examples from history = ?
  • IRB must have = ?

Ethical and Legal - Employment & Research

A

Humaneness in Research:

(a) Vital to act with beneficence and for research to not exploit the subjects.

(b) History of abuse in research subjects

  • Nazi Germany
  • Tuskegee Syphilis Study
  • Willowbrook experiments:

(c) Federal Policy for the Protection of Human Subjects (1991):

  • Mandatedinternal review board (IRB) at every institution engaging in human researchand receiving federal funds.
  • The IRB must have at least 5 members, including one who represents non-scientific interests (clergy, attorney, ethicist).
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