The
rights of patients
Patients'
rights can be seen as social rights and as individual rights. As social
rights, they cover aspects such as the quality and accessibility of
health care. As individual rights they relate to basic human and consumer
rights.
Increasingly, consumers
are being asked to take on more and more responsibility for their own
health care. They are being mncouraged to adopt healthy lifestyles that
help to prevent many illnesses. They are becoming more active in the
treatment of illness, rather than being the passive recipients of therapy.
They are also being asked to burden more of the direct costs of heal|h
care, oftmn paying fees for services, which previously weze covered
by go~ernment funds, or by purchasing the medicines they require.
With this increased
responsibility, there must also be increased recognition of the rights
of consumers of health care. Efforts are now underway in many countries
to develop a more balanced partnership between health care providers
doctors, nurses, pharmacists and other health workers and the people
who use those services the citizens, the consumers, the patients.
Part of improving
the relationship between health care providers and users of the services
has been the development of Charters for Patients' Rights. For patients,
such charters provide a valuable instrument in their campaigns for greater
equality and participation in the care of their health. For health workers,
a charter serves as a guideline to assist in further strengthening professional
codes of ethics and conduct.
Although patients'
rights are universal, their implementation and |he specific content
of their declarations are likely to vary from country to country. Some
of the key issues that need to be addressed in any declaration of patients'
rights include:
*the right to health care
*access to information
*choice
*participation and representation
*respect for human dignity and the right to humane care
*the right to confidentiality
*the right to redress for grievances
Source:
Consumers International, UK.