Snyder Kristen, Bloom Joseph D
Oregon Health and Science University, Portland, OR, USA.
J Am Acad Psychiatry Law. 2004;32(1):76-9.
The State of Oregon recently enacted legislation that increases physician responsibility for reporting medically at-risk drivers. The legislation comes at a time when the public is closely scrutinizing the question of the elderly and driving and the role of physicians in the reporting of potentially dangerous drivers. The evolution of Oregon's law is somewhat unique and offers an opportunity to examine what perhaps is to come in other states. The law broadened the role of the physician in assessment and reporting of impaired drivers. It also opened the door for new tort, that of "negligent failure to report," before input from physicians and other health care providers led to important revisions in the final statute. Physicians must look to current statutes to guide the legislative process in their own states, so that new law aimed at maintaining safe highways also preserves the physician-patient relationship and allows for a collaborative assessment of driving skill in the physician's office.
俄勒冈州最近颁布了一项立法,增加了医生报告有医疗风险驾驶者的责任。这项立法出台之际,公众正在密切审视老年人与驾驶的问题以及医生在报告潜在危险驾驶者方面的作用。俄勒冈州法律的演变有些独特,为审视其他州可能出现的情况提供了一个机会。该法律扩大了医生在评估和报告受损驾驶者方面的作用。在医生和其他医疗服务提供者的意见促使最终法规做出重要修订之前,它还开启了新的侵权行为,即“疏忽未报告”。医生必须参考现行法规来指导本州的立法程序,以便旨在维护高速公路安全的新法律也能维护医患关系,并允许在医生办公室对驾驶技能进行协作评估。