The United States promulgated the Hospital Patient Safety Act in ().
Hello, dear, the United States promulgated the Hospital Patient Safety Law in (), 1986. Oh, 1986, the US Congress passed a law called the Emergency Medical Care and Labor Act, commonly known as the "Anti-dumping Law". The basic content of the Emergency Medical Care and Labor Act is that any patient who comes to the hospital for diagnosis and treatment, as long as he or she thinks that his or her illness may be an emergency medical situation, the emergency department must provide all possible medical services to determine whether an emergency medical situation exists; As long as the hospital has the corresponding medical conditions, it is necessary to stabilize the condition that directly threatens the patient's life through clinical rescue; If the hospital does not have the necessary medical resources (such as medical articles and medical equipment), patients can be transferred to hospitals that do have corresponding medical resources. This shows how the hospital should deal with the poor patients who come to the emergency department. First of all, in places where all patients can see when they enter the emergency room, the hospital provides eye-catching information publicity to help patients understand the rights conferred by the Emergency Medical and Labor Act. Before the ability to pay medical expenses is confirmed, patients have the right to receive health examination and medical services to stabilize their condition. In other words, emergency doctors can't ask patients about their medical insurance and family economic conditions when they need to be rescued. In this way, poor patients without medical insurance can be treated as long as they come to the emergency department. If there is really no money, the hospital will have to reduce the fees.