Home

Climate Change Project

Table of Contents

Courses

Search


<< >> Up Title Contents
Intentional Acts

Intentional torts are usually not within the course and scope of employment. Employers may be vicariously liable for the intentional torts of their employees only if the employer tolerated the activities or did not properly screen the employees for dangerous tendencies. For example, assume a physician hires a physician's assistant who subsequently sexually assaults a patient. If the employee has no history of assaulting patients or other persons and the physician has not had any notice of problems, the physician will not be liable for the assault. If, however, the employee had assaulted persons in the past and the physician was negligent in discovering this, the physician could be liable under the theory of negligent hiring. The physician could be liable for negligent retention if there were complaints about the behavior of the physician's assistant and the physician failed to act on them.

Physicians must have employment criteria designed to detect employees who are a potential hazard. They must take quick action if an employee is suspected of intentionally harming patients. Intentional injuries must never be covered up. Cover-ups can result in large financial losses through the assessment of punitive damages, and they undermine public confidence in the physician or medical institution. In one example, which occurred in a San Antonio teaching hospital,[10] a pediatric ICU nurse became so involved in the thrill of resuscitating patients that she began poisoning children with a muscle relaxant to create resuscitation opportunities, not all of which were successful. Rather than investigating the unexpected increase in deaths, the hospital and physician committees covered up the evidence pointing to murder and offered the nurse a good recommendation if she would resign. She continued to poison children in her subsequent job but was found out and convicted of murder. Through its participation in the cover-up, the hospital and physicians increased their liability for the nurse's actions while she was in their employ and may have assumed liability for the murders she committed later because the job was obtained with their false recommendation. They may have also committed crimes themselves by not reporting suspicious deaths and injuries under both the child abuse reporting laws and murder laws.

[10]New York Times: Federal investigators report on clusters of infant deaths. 1985, Jul 25; New York Times: Investigators near end of inquiry into deaths of infants at hospital. 1984, Apr 11.


<< >> Up Title Contents

Law and the Physician Homepage
Copyright 1993 - NOT UPDATED

The Climate Change and Public Health Law Site
The Best on the WWW Since 1995!
Copyright as to non-public domain materials
See DR-KATE.COM for home hurricane and disaster preparation
See WWW.EPR-ART.COM for photography of southern Louisiana and Hurricane Katrina
Professor Edward P. Richards, III, JD, MPH - Webmaster

Provide Website Feedback - https://www.lsu.edu/feedback
Privacy Statement - https://www.lsu.edu/privacy
Accessibility Statement - https://www.lsu.edu/accessibility