Middle Park Hospitals support the rights of all patients across the lifespan including geriatric, adult, adolescent, pediatric, infant and neonatal populations. These rights may be exercised through the patient individually or through their authorized surrogate decision maker.
1. Be informed of your patient rights in advance of receiving or discontinuing care when possible.
2. Receive care, treatment and visitation regardless of disability, national origin, culture, age, color, race, religion, gender identity, sexual orientation. No one is denied examination or treatment of an emergency medical condition because of their source of payment.
3. Give informed consent for all treatment, procedures, and/or production of recordings, films or other images when used for other than identification, diagnosis or treatment.
4. Be informed of your health status/prognosis, including unanticipated outcomes of care and the treatment and services related to serious preventable adverse events.
5. Participate in all areas of your care plan, treatment, care decisions, and discharge plan.
6. Receive appropriate assessment and prompt management of your pain.
7. Be treated with respect and dignity.
8. Experience personal privacy, comfort and security to the extent possible during your stay.
9. Be free from restraints or seclusion imposed as a means of coercion, discipline, convenience or retaliation by staff.
10. Experience confidentiality of all communication and clinical records related to your care. You will receive a copy of our Notice of Privacy Practices to inform you how your personal medical information can be used and disclosed and your rights related to your medical information.
11. Have access to telephone calls, mail, and other communication devices. Any restrictions to access will be discussed with you, and you will be involved in the decision when possible or appropriate.
12. Choose a “visitor” who may visit you, including but not limited to, a spouse, a domestic partner (including a same-sex domestic partner), another family member, or a friend, and you have the right to withdraw or deny such choice at any time. You also have the right to select an identified “support person” who can make visitation decisions should you become incapacitated.
13. If hospitalized, have the right to designate at least one post-discharge caregiver who will assist you with basic tasks following your discharge and, along with you or your authorized surrogate decision maker, provide consultation on your discharge plan. Designating a post-discharge caregiver does not mean the person you have designated is obligated to care for you.
14. Be communicated with in a manner you can understand which is tailored your age, language, understanding and ability including, but not limited to, access to interpreter services and communication aides, at no cost.
15. Have access to pastoral/spiritual care.
16. Receive care in a safe setting.
17. Be free from all forms of abuse, neglect, mistreatment, or exploitation.
18. Have access to protective services (e.g., guardianship, advocacy services, and child/adult protective services).
19. Request medically necessary and appropriate care and treatment.
20. Refuse any drug, test, procedure, or treatment and be informed of the medical consequences of such a decision.
21. Consent to or refuse to participate in teaching programs, research, experimental programs, and/or clinical trials.
22. Receive information about Advance Directives. Set up or provide Advance Directives and have them followed. Designate an authorized surrogate decision-maker as permitted by law and as needed.
23. Participate in decision-making regarding ethical issues, personal values or beliefs.
24. If hospitalized, have a family member or representative of your choice and your physician promptly notified of your admission to the hospital, upon request.
25. Know the names, professional status and experience of your caregivers.
26. Have access to your medical records within a reasonable timeframe.
27. Be examined, treated, and if necessary, transferred to another facility if you have an emergency medical condition or are in labor, regardless of your ability to pay.
28. Request and receive, prior to the initiation of non-emergent care or treatment, the charges (or estimate of charges) for routine, usual, and customary services and any co-payment, deductible, or non-covered charges, as well as the facility’s general billing procedures, including receipt and explanation of an itemized bill. This right is honored regardless of the source(s) of payment.
You also have the right to file a complaint with the appropriate oversight boards including the Colorado Board of Medical Examiners, the Colorado Dental and Podiatry Boards and the Colorado Department of Regulatory Agencies. Contact information will
be provided by a facility representative upon request.