In so many ways...who cares: Do you want to rely on a Dr who doesn't want you as a patient? Not a good move. At the very least, be prepared for a long wait, and then his requirement you have a whole set of very invasive (bend over and smile!) and expensive tests, before he can decide how to treat your runny nose.
Medical records belong to the patient, not the doctor and remain confidential regardless of the doctor's financial condition.
Close medical surveillance must continue for the rest of the patient's life. I
A patient is an individual who is under the care of a doctor or physician. This could include a specialist such as a therapist or chiropractor.
An ACLS nurse must continue CPR until a doctor pronounces the patient expired, if the patient shows signs of life, or you are too tired to continue and there is no one else to take over CPR.
The key legal considerations that govern the doctor-patient relationship under the doctor-patient relationship law include confidentiality, informed consent, duty of care, and the patient's right to privacy. These laws outline the responsibilities and rights of both doctors and patients to ensure ethical and lawful interactions in healthcare settings.
In an Entity-Relationship Diagram for a patient information system, you may have entities like Patient, Doctor, Appointment, Prescription, and Medical Record. The relationships between these entities could include a Patient having many Appointments, a Doctor treating many Patients, and a Prescription being linked to a specific Patient. Attributes for each entity would include things like patient ID, doctor ID, appointment date, prescription details, and diagnosis information.
When someone asks you if you are the doctor or the patient, it usually means that you are the patient but you are trying to diagnosis your symptoms as if you were the doctor.
i am sure it can't not if the doctor didn't see the patient
A doctor can be sued for breaking doctor/patient confidentiality.
The patient was waiting for the doctor to arrive. She was a patient person.
No. It is against the doctor/patient confidentiality agreement.
No, a doctor cannot write a prescription for someone who is not their patient.