Patient Rights and Responsibilities
From: Ruth McNew, Student Health Center, Northern Illinois
University, F40RAM1@WPO.CSO.NIU.EDU
By your presence in the University Health Service, you have entered
into a partnership with our health care team that has been assembled
for the purpose of caring for you and other eligible patients in need.
The patient-team relationship is clearly a mutual relationship with
rights and responsibilities accruing to all participants.
- You have the right to optimal quality of care. You should expect
that it be given to you in a manner that recognizes and respects your
individuality and dignity as a person.
- You have the right to receive whatever treatment is clinically
indicated in so far as it is within the scope of services provided by the
University Health Service. If definitive care is not provided here, you
may be transferred or referred to another health practitioner or facility,
but only when you have been informed of the need and the alternatives and
you have agreed to such a move, and only if the referral instition or
practitioner has accepted you for admission or referral, when you have
been informed of the need and the alternatives and you have agreed to such
a move, and only if the referral instition or practitioner has accepted
you for admission or referral.
- You have the right, prior to consenting to any treatment procedures,
to a full and understandable explanation from your health care
professional of the diagnosis of your problem, proposed treatment, and
expected prognosis both with or without treatment.
- You have the right to seek a second opinion within the University
Health Service, and, if you deem necessary, you have the right, at your
own request and expense, to ask for another medical opinion from a source
external to the University Health Service.
- You have the right to delay or refuse treatment. You also have the
right to leave the University Health Service at any time prior to the
completion of treatment. However, in both cases, you will be responsible
for any untoward consequences and will be asked to sign a release stating
that against professional advice, you are leaving the University Health
Service and/or will not follow the treatment plan.
- You have the right to expect confidentiality and protection of your
privacy in all examination and treatment areas; in all areas used for
taking patient histories and other confidential data; and in the
protection of your health care records.
- You have the right to know the name, position, and status of all
individuals working at the University Health Service with whom you
come in contact.
- You have the right to timely care, with priority given to those
students who have urgent or emergency problems.
- You have the right to review with your physician, practitioner, or
his/her designee all information contained in your medical rcord as a
patient in the University Health Service and to have a personal copy of
the information (for a minimal processing fee) within a reasonable time
after request. However, if it is deemed medically inadvisable to provide
this privilege to you, the information may be reviewed by a qualified
person designated and authorized in writing by you.
- You have the responsibility to truthfully provide all information you
can about any present and/or past conditions, illnesses and/or treatments,
and to answer to the best of your ability all questions put to you by
health professionals caring for you.
- You have the responsibility to acquaint yourself with University
Health Service policy and procedures that affect you and to abide by them.
- You have the responsibility to return borrowed equipment within the
specified time, to keep appointments or give reasonable notice of a
change, and to pick up prescriptions requested from the pharmacy
within a reasonable amount of time.
- You have the right and responsibility to provide comments and/or
express concerns about the health care system at the University Health
Service and/or its referral facilities and practitioners directly to the
health care professional serving you, to the Student Health Advisory
Council, or the administration.
Go to next statement of Patient Rights and
Responsibilities.
Go to the menu of
selections in
the Winter 1996 issue of CQ.