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Tarasoff in Texas.

A R Felthous1, V R Scarano

  • 1Chester Mental Health Center, IL 62233, USA.

Texas Medicine
|August 10, 2000
PubMed
Summary
This summary is machine-generated.

Texas physicians lack a legal duty to warn potential victims of patient violence. While they can alert authorities about dangerous patients, direct warnings to victims are not legally permitted under current Texas law.

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Area of Science:

  • Medical Law
  • Public Health
  • Clinical Practice

Background:

  • Texas physicians operate under specific legal constraints regarding patient confidentiality and potential harm to third parties.
  • Existing statutes in Texas do not impose a duty on physicians to warn potential victims of a patient's violent conduct.
  • The Medical Practice Act of Texas strictly upholds physician-patient confidentiality, limiting exceptions for warnings.

Framework:

  • No statutory duty exists for Texas physicians to warn potential victims of patient violence.
  • Physicians may warn medical or law enforcement authorities if a patient poses a danger to themselves, the physician, or others.
  • The Medical Practice Act of Texas does not permit exceptions to confidentiality for warning potential victims.

Implementation:

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  • Five Texas appellate courts have examined the duty of clinicians to warn identifiable victims.
  • These court decisions show similar approaches but contain notable distinctions.
  • The Texas Supreme Court, in a 1998 ruling, did not establish a physician's duty to protect third parties from patient violence.

Implications:

  • Texas physicians must understand the evolving legal landscape regarding their responsibilities and potential liabilities towards third parties.
  • This jurisprudence impacts how clinicians manage patient safety concerns involving potential harm to others.
  • Familiarity with these legal precedents is crucial for all Texas physicians to navigate professional protective duties.