Chapter 3
Legal Concepts in Nurse Anesthesia Practice
Sources of Law
The source for all American law is the Constitution of the United States.1 All governmental power, state and federal, stems from that document. The Constitution cannot be changed by legislation nor can the President act in contravention of the Constitution. The Constitution can be changed only by amendment, a difficult process.2 The final authority on the interpretation of the Constitution is the Supreme Court of the United States.3
The Supreme Court of the United States, however, makes rulings only on laws in reference to federal law. State laws are interpreted by their respective state courts, unless those laws violate the Constitution of the United States or other federal laws. If the state law violates the U.S. Constitution or other federal law, the federal law supersedes.4
Nurse anesthetists must maintain an awareness of what regulations apply to them. Failure to adhere to the board of nursing regulations and standards of care may result in actions against a nurse anesthetist’s license, up to revocation of the license and fines. In 2003 a nursing board in Oklahoma revoked a nurse anesthetist’s license and imposed a $99,000 fine for unsafe injection practices that resulted in 699 probable hepatitis C virus (HCV) infections and 31 probable hepatitis B virus (HBV) infections. The Board of Nursing’s action occurred after the CRNA was reported by registered nurses working in his pain control clinic.5 Other regulatory agencies such as the Centers for Disease Control and Prevention also make standards that courts may apply to nurse anesthetists.6
The highest level of court is the supreme appeals court. In the federal system, this is the United States Supreme Court. In some states, the name of the highest court is different. For example, in New York, the trial court is called the Supreme Court, the intermediate appellate court is the supreme appellate court, and the supreme appellate court is the New York Court of Appeals. Some states also have two separate supreme courts, one for civil cases and one for criminal cases.
Criminal Law
At the time of this chapter’s writing, two nurse anesthetists are being prosecuted for racketeering, insurance fraud, and neglect of patients in the Las Vegas hepatitis cases.7 Nurse anesthetists must be aware that billing one patient for a single-use vial of medication that is used on more than one person may constitute insurance fraud. Likewise, charging both patients for medication from a single-use vial may constitute insurance fraud.
Civil Law
Duty
Standard of Care
At one time, the standard of care was based on how other practitioners in the community where the alleged malpractice took place would have acted. Today, courts hold healthcare professionals to standards that are relevant for the entire country. Nevertheless, courts still allow for differences related to the size of the community and the equipment available to the anesthetist. For example, although a rural hospital with 25 beds might not be expected to have an anesthetist in-house 24 hours a day or to have equipment available for extremely specialized tertiary care, a 1000-bed urban tertiary care medical center would. However, the nurse anesthetist in both situations is expected to work at the same level given the limitations of the available equipment. For example, a nurse anesthetist in a small rural hospital might not have the same equipment for the rapid transfusion of blood that a nurse anesthetist in a large urban trauma center had. If a patient were exsanguinating, however, the rural anesthetist would be expected to recognize this and transfuse as rapidly as possible with the equipment available to him or her.
Standards promulgated by professional organizations may be used as evidence of a standard of care. In some jurisdictions, courts view the standards as evidence of the standard of care. In other jurisdictions, they are considered as conclusive proof. Nurse anesthetists should be familiar with the American Association of Nurse Anesthetists (AANA) Standards for Nurse Anesthesia Practice. Nurse anesthetists must also adhere to published standards such as the AANA Position Statement on Syringe Safety.8 Deviations for the patient care standards during an anesthetic procedure should be documented and the reason for the deviation explained. In addition, nurse anesthetists should be familiar with the policies of the institutions in which they work. Those policies also can be used as evidence of the standard of care. Deviations from institutional policies should be documented and explained.
Nurse anesthetists must stay abreast of new and emerging standards of care. One emerging area is the issue of distractions in the operating room, particularly reading, texting, and surfing the Internet during patient care. Some institutions have created policies forbidding the use of such devices in patient care areas. However, there is a general move in society against such distractions when driving, flying, and engaging in other important tasks. Train drivers and boat pilots have been held liable both criminally and civilly for injuries that were the result of these distractions.9,10 Two Northwest Airlines pilots lost their licenses after flying past their scheduled airport while working on their laptop computers.11 Even though there may not be published standards forbidding all texting and Internet surfing in the operating room, nurse anesthetists must be aware of how their behaviors would be viewed by regulatory agencies and juries. Even if it is common practice, it may be viewed as a deviation from the standard of care. As Judge Learned Hand said,
Indeed in most cases reasonable prudence is in fact common prudence; but strictly it is never its measure; a whole calling may have unduly lagged in the adoption of new and available devices. It never may set its own tests, however persuasive be its usages. Courts must in the end say what is required; there are precautions so imperative that even their universal disregard will not excuse their omission.12
Informed Consent
Nurse anesthetists must obtain patients’ consent before they can begin treatment. In a much quoted 1914 decision, Justice Cardozo stated, “[e]very human being of adult years and sound mind has a right to determine what shall be done with his own body.”13 Consent is the patient’s agreement to undergo a specified treatment. A nurse anesthetist who treats a patient who has not agreed to treatment might be liable to that patient. For example, if a patient was undergoing an elective procedure under local anesthesia and the surgeon asked the nurse anesthetist to give the patient a general anesthetic, the nurse anesthetist and the surgeon might be liable for treatment without consent, even though general anesthesia had never been discussed with the patient. Informed consent, as opposed to consent, is the process in which the practitioner tells a patient not only about the diagnosis and the proposed procedure but also about the probability of the procedure’s success and its associated risks, as well as about reasonable alternatives to the procedure. If more than one type of anesthesia is possible—for example, epidural versus general—nurse anesthetists have an affirmative duty to explain both to the patient. The nurse anesthetist may make recommendations on the basis of experience and the surgeon’s and anesthetist’s personal preferences. However, they should avoid making unsubstantiated statements—for example, that one type of anesthesia should be administered because it is not associated with complications, or that desired results are guaranteed with the use of a particular anesthetic or surgical procedure.
In addition to the ethical and moral desirability of informed consent, its importance to the practitioner lies in the fact that the failure to obtain informed consent can transform a faultless complication into a damage award against the practitioner. In one case, a patient was told by an anesthetist that the only potential problem that could happen from her upcoming spinal anesthesia for a hysterectomy was postdural puncture-related headache. The patient suffered some paralysis on the left side and problems with bowel and bladder control. The Supreme Court of Kansas stated that “While there does not necessarily have to be negligence in the administration of the spinal anesthetic for the resultant damage which [the patient] experienced, the risk was still present….[W]e find [the anesthetist] failed to obtain the informed consent of [the patient] to the spinal anesthetic prior to its administration.”14 The case illustrates that merely telling the patient what type of anesthesia will be administered or obtaining a signature on a consent form does not constitute informed consent. Nurse anesthetists must understand that informed consent is a process that goes well beyond its objective manifestation (i.e., the patient’s signature on a form).
Some risks, however, need not be disclosed. If a patient is aware of a risk or if a risk is common knowledge and the patient’s awareness can be presumed, no disclosure is necessary. An anesthetist is not liable for failing to disclose risks that were not known in the anesthesia community at the time of the anesthetic procedure. Risks that are problems only if the anesthetic procedure is performed negligently need not be explained. If a patient specifically asks not to be informed of risks, they need not be disclosed. In this instance, however, the nurse anesthetist should note the request in the chart. A final instance in which an anesthetist may withhold information about risks is known as therapeutic privilege. If revealing the information about risks would jeopardize the outcome of the treatment or have an adverse effect on the patient’s well-being, then the information can be withheld. The anesthetist must document the reasons for nondisclosure before the procedure. Although therapeutic privilege was used successfully as a defense in a 1955 anesthesia-related case, today it should be used with great caution.15