Patient Rights & Responsibilities
Patient Rights
You have the right to:
- Considerate and respectful care, and to be made comfortable. You have the right to respect for your cultural, psychosocial, spiritual, and personal values, beliefs and preferences.
- Have a family member (or other representative of your choosing) and your own physician notified promptly of your admission to the hospital.
- Know the name of the licensed health care practitioner acting within the scope of his or her professional licensure who has primary responsibility for coordinating your care, and the names and professional relationships of physicians and non-physicians who will see you.
- Receive information about your health status, diagnosis, prognosis, course of treatment, prospects for recovery and outcomes of care (including unanticipated outcomes) in terms you can understand. You have the right to effective communication and to participate in the development and implementation of your plan of care. You have the right to participate in ethical questions that arise in the course of your care, including issues of conflict resolution, withholding resuscitative services, and forgoing or withdrawing life-sustaining treatment.
- Make decisions regarding medical care, and receive as much information about any proposed treatment or procedure as you may need in order to give informed consent or to refuse a course of treatment. Except in emergencies, this information shall include a description of the procedure or treatment, the medically significant risks involved, alternate courses of treatment or nontreatment and the risks involved in each, and the name of the person who will carry out the procedure or treatment.
- Request or refuse treatment, to the extent permitted by law. However, you do not have the right to demand inappropriate or medically unnecessary treatment or services. You have the right to leave the hospital even against the advice of members of the medical staff, to the extent permitted by law.
- Be advised if the hospital/licensed health care practitioner acting within the scope of his or her professional licensure proposes to engage in or perform human experimentation affecting your care or treatment. You have the right to refuse to participate in such research projects.
- Reasonable responses to any reasonable requests made for service.
- Appropriate assessment and management of your pain, information about pain, pain relief measures and to participate in pain management decisions. You may request or reject the use of any or all modalities to relieve pain, including opiate medication, if you suffer from severe chronic intractable pain. The doctor may refuse to prescribe the opiate medication, but if so, must inform you that there are physicians who specialize in the treatment of pain with methods that include the use of opiates.
- Formulate advance directives. This includes designating a decision maker if you become incapable of understanding a proposed treatment or become unable to communicate your wishes regarding care. Hospital staff and practitioners who provide care in the hospital shall comply with these directives. All patients’ rights apply to the person who has legal responsibility to make decisions regarding medical care on your behalf.
- Have personal privacy respected. Case discussion, consultation, examination and treatment are confidential and should be conducted discreetly. You have the right to be told the reason for the presence of any individual. You have the right to have visitors leave prior to an examination and when treatment issues are being discussed. Privacy curtains will be used in semi-private rooms.
- Confidential treatment of all communications and records pertaining to your care and stay in the hospital. You will receive a separate “Notice of Privacy Practices” that explains your privacy rights in detail and how we may use and disclose your protected health information.
- Receive care in a safe setting, free from mental, physical, sexual or verbal abuse and neglect, exploitation or harassment. You have the right to access protective and advocacy services including notifying government agencies of neglect or abuse.
- Be free from restraints and seclusion of any form used as a means of coercion, discipline, convenience or retaliation by staff.
- Reasonable continuity of care and to know in advance the time and location of appointments as well as the identity of the persons providing the care.
- Be informed by the physician, or a delegate of the physician, of continuing health care requirements and options following discharge from the hospital. You have the right to be involved in the development and implementation of your discharge plan. Upon your request, a friend or family member may be provided this information also.
- Know which hospital rules and policies apply to your conduct while a patient.
- Designate a support person as well as visitors of your choosing, if you have decision-making capacity, whether or not the visitor is related by blood, marriage, or registered domestic partner status, unless:
- No visitors are allowed.
- The facility reasonably determines that the presence of a particular visitor would endanger the health or safety of a patient, a member of the health facility staff, or other visitor to the health facility, or would significantly disrupt the operations of the facility.
- You have told the health facility staff that you no longer want a particular person to visit.
However, a health facility may establish reasonable restrictions upon visitation, including restrictions upon the hours of visitation and number of visitors. The health facility must inform you (or your support person, where appropriate) of your visitation rights, including any clinical restrictions or limitations. The health facility is not permitted to restrict, limit, or otherwise deny visitation privileges on the basis of race, color, national origin, religion, sex, gender identity, sexual orientation, or disability.
- Have your wishes considered, if you lack decision-making capacity, for the purposes of determining who may visit. The method of that consideration will comply with federal law and be disclosed in the hospital policy on visitation. At a minimum, the hospital shall include any persons living in your household and any support person pursuant to federal law.
- Examine and receive an explanation of the hospital’s bill regardless of the source of payment.
- Exercise these rights without regard to sex, economic status, educational background, race, color, religion, ancestry, national origin, sexual orientation, gender identity/expression, disability, medical condition, marital status, age, registered domestic partner status, genetic information, citizenship, primary language, immigration status or the source of payment for care.
- File a complaint/grievance. If you want to file a complaint/ grievance with this hospital, you may do so by writing or by calling: Barton Health Risk Management, 2170 South Ave., South Lake Tahoe, CA 96150 530.543.5845
The complaint/grievance committee will review each complaint/ grievance and provide you with a written response within 30 days.
The written response will contain the name of a person to contact at the hospital, the steps taken to investigate the complaint/grievance, the results of the complaint/grievance process, and the date of completion of the complaint/grievance process. Concerns regarding quality of care or premature discharge will also be referred to the appropriate Utilization and Quality Control Peer Review Organization (PRO).
- File a complaint/grievance with the California Department of Public Health and/or The Joint Commission regardless of whether you use the hospital’s complaint/grievance process:
- California Department of Public Health Sacramento District Office, 3901 Lennane Drive, Suite 210, Sacramento, CA 95834, 916.263.5800
- The Joint Commission Office of Quality and Patient Safety, One Renaissance Boulevard, Oakbrook Terrace, IL 60181, 800.994.6610
Nevada Non-Discrimination Statement
Barton Health does not discriminate and does not permit discrimination, including, without limitation, bullying, abuse or harassment, on the basis of actual or perceived race, color, religion, national origin, ancestry, age, gender, physical or mental disability, sexual orientation, gender identity or expression or HIV status, or based on association with another person on account of that person's actual or perceived race, color, religion, national origin, ancestry, age, gender, physical or mental disability, sexual orientation, gender identity or expression or HIV status.
Any patient or resident who has experienced discrimination may file a complaint with Department of Health and Human Services Nevada Division of Public and Behavioral Health (DPBH) by calling the Complaint Intake Line at 702.668.3250 or visiting the Nevada Division of Public and Behavioral Health website.
Patient Concerns
Our goal is to provide the highest quality of care to all patients and families. Occasionally concerns are raised that require review and monitoring. Please contact the department manager or nursing office manager with any concerns.
In addition, you may contact Ann Truscott, Risk Management Manager, ext. 5845, or mail: Barton Health Risk Management, P.O. Box 9578 South Lake Tahoe, CA 96158. Grievances will be reviewed and investigated as soon as they are received. Response to significant complaints will be made in writing by the manager doing the follow-up within 30 days of the receipt of the concern.
If there continue to be concerns the California Department of Public Health can be contacted at 916.263.5800 or 800.554.0354 or mail: Sacramento District Office Licensing and Certification Program California Department of Public Health 3901 Lennane Drive, Suite 210, Sacramento, CA 95834-2956
The public may contact The Joint Commission’s Office of Quality and Patient Safety (OQPS) to report any concerns or register complaints about a Joint Commission-accredited health care organization. To report the details about your complaint, call the The Joint Commission’s patient safety event phone line at 800.994.6610, or mail: Office of Quality and Patient Safety (OQPS), The Joint Commission, One Renaissance Blvd., Oakbrook Terrace, Illinois, 60181. Online submissions may be made at www.jointcommission.org.
Any physician-related concerns can be reported to the California Medical Board at 916.263.2424 or the Nevada Medical Board at 775.688.2559.
The Department of Fair Employment and Housing can be reached at 800.884.1684.
Medicare patients have certain rights and protections, and Livanta is here to help. The Livanta Beneficiary and Family Centered Care Quality Improvement Organization (BFCC-QIO) handles all Medicare beneficiary complaints, quality of care reviews, medical necessity reviews, and discharge appeals from hospitals, skilled nursing facilities, home health and hospice providers, and rehabilitation facilities. Livanta may be contacted through helpline 877.588.1123 or mail: BFCC-QIO Program, Area 5; 9090 Junction Dr., Suite 10; Annapolis Junction, MD 20701.