Knowledge, Understanding and Handling of Medicolegal Issues among Different Cadres of Allopathic Practitioners in a Tertiary Care Hospital of Tamil Nadu

Authors

  • Hanumantha Assistant Professor, Department of Forensic Medicine, ESIC Medical College and PGIMSR, KK Nagar, Chennai
  • M Pallavi Assistant Professor, Department of Biochemistry, Apollo Institute Medical Sciences & Research, Murakambattu, Chittoor
  • B R Narapureddy Professor & HOD, Department of Community Medicine Fatima institute of medical sciences, Ramraju palli, Kadapa.
  • S Razdan Assistant professor, Department of Forensic Medicine, World College of Medical Sciences, Jhajjar.
  • L K V Reddy Assistant Professor, Department of Public Health, Saudi Electronic University, Abha, Saudi Arabia.
  • R S Reddy Assistant Professor, Department of Medical Rehabilitation Sciences, College of Applied Medical Sciences, King Khalid University, Abha, Saudi Arabia
  • K Gular Lecturer, Department of Department of Medical Rehabilitation Sciences, College of Applied Medical Sciences, King Khalid University, Abha, Saudi Arabia.

Keywords:

Brought dead, Consent, Medico-legal laws, Poisoning case, POCSO Act, Sexual Assault

Abstract

Increasing literacy rate, the social exchange of information on various forums, and online readily available data have raised awareness  about patients' rights among the public, resulting in more legal suits being registered against the medical fraternity. Nearly one-third (75%)  of doctors faced workplace violence at least once in their lifetime in India. Based on this background study has been conducted with the  objectives to assess the knowledge and perceptions of the medical code of ethics and standard basic legal fundamentals and to find out the  level of understanding on handling different legal situations and medical laws among doctors in a tertiary care institution. An institutional based cross-sectional study was conducted. Out of 120 participants, 68 (56.6%) were male and the remaining 52 (43.3%) were females.  Nearly half of them were not aware of the importance of consent (49%), and the majority of the participants, 67 (5%) were not aware in  which form the consent must be obtained. Overall, 63% of the participants examined the sexual assault cases at least once. Irrespective of  the specialty and cadre, allopathic practitioners are grossly deficient in medicolegal knowledge, which is a primary concern and needs to  be addressed urgently. It requires regular reinforcement training and workshops to update the medicolegal issues from time to time, at least  annually. Concerned National organizations must introduce an accredited certificate course on Basic Medico legal laws (BML) and  Advanced Medico legal laws (AML) to make literate doctors in medicolegal laws. 

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Published

2022-12-14

How to Cite

Hanumantha, Pallavi , M., Narapureddy, B. R., Razdan , S., Reddy , L. K. V., Reddy, R. S., & Gular, K. (2022). Knowledge, Understanding and Handling of Medicolegal Issues among Different Cadres of Allopathic Practitioners in a Tertiary Care Hospital of Tamil Nadu. Journal of Indian Academy of Forensic Medicine, 44(4), 72-76. https://jiafm.in/index.php/jiafm/article/view/79