physician-patient privilege
Noun: A legal right or ethical principle that protects the confidentiality of communications between a doctor and their patient. This privilege belongs to the patient and allows them to prevent their physician from disclosing private information shared during the course of medical care in a legal setting, such as a court proceeding, without the patient's explicit permission.
This term is used primarily in legal, medical, and ethical contexts to describe a specific type of confidential relationship protected by law. * The court upheld the physician-patient privilege, preventing the doctor from testifying about his patient's medical history. * Understanding physician-patient privilege is fundamental to maintaining trust in the healthcare system. * There are specific exceptions where physician-patient privilege may be legally overridden, such as in cases involving child abuse or a serious threat to public safety.
- Waiving the privilege: A patient can voluntarily give up this right, allowing their physician to share confidential information.
- By signing the release form, the patient waived the physician-patient privilege for her insurance claim.
- The privilege is distinct from general medical confidentiality, which is a broader ethical duty, whereas the privilege is a specific legal rule of evidence.
- Attorney-client privilege (noun): A similar legal protection for communications between a lawyer and their client.
- Privileged communication (noun): The general term for confidential conversations protected by law from forced disclosure.
- Confidentiality (noun): The ethical practice of keeping patient information private.
- Doctor-patient confidentiality (in a legal evidence context)
- Medical confidentiality (specifically referring to its legal evidentiary aspect)
- Duty to report / Mandatory reporting (in specific contexts where the law requires disclosure)
- Disclosure
- HIPAA (Health Insurance Portability and Accountability Act): A U.S. federal law that provides privacy rules to protect patient health information, related to but distinct from the evidentiary privilege.
- Informed consent: The process of authorizing medical treatment, which is separate from but can involve waiving confidentiality.
- the right of a physician to refuse to divulge confidential information from a patient without the consent of the patient