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Borrowed Servant & Apparent Authority Doctrines

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There are two concepts

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that you really should keep in mind, and they are all apart.

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I want you to keep, when you're thinking about these things,

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keep going back to the idea that the law's trying

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to define the fair relationship

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between the parties and the patient.

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And that the facts are going to control two concepts.

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A borrowed servant. What's a borrowed servant?

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If you're an attending radiologist

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or if you're an independent contracting radiologist

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and you're using the hospital's, residents, technicians,

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nurses, staff, other staff,

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then you are borrowing them.

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You, if you have control, it's always looking for control.

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If you have supervisory control, well, you may say,

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well, I don't really have control over these people.

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Well, that's, that's a concept that you have

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to look to the facts for.

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Are you one who tells the technician what to do?

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Well, that's controlled in any of these.

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The residents, if you're giving a resident a job to do,

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they don't work for you.

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They may not even work for the hospital,

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but are you borrowing them?

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You are borrowing them in that circumstance many times

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with a resident, whether a resident's doing a read for you

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or doing a follow up

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or procedure for you, they are your borrowed servant

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and you are vicariously liable for their acts of negligence.

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That is looked upon from the perspective of the institution

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and the team and how they work together

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and what they're supposed to do.

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What is the supervisory capacity?

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What is the management of that?

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And that's really fact-based.

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And, and it's different in every case.

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And we'll, we'll take a look at a couple cases where, one,

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it was not considered control

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and one it was the apparent agency doctor is different.

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That is looked upon from the perspective of the patient.

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It's sort of normal for people in my business

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to ask an attending

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or an independent contractor, radiologist.

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Um, doctor, when you, um, when you're in the hospital,

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uh, do you wear a white coat?

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The answer is yes. Yes I do.

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And what does your white coat say on the, on the left side,

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uh, of, of the coat?

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Well, it says Mary Smith, MD Radiology.

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That's not really putting you out

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as a independent contractor, is it?

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You don't have a group on it.

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You have radiology.

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Can a patient now, once again,

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apparent authority is from the patient's perspective,

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is it reasonable for a patient to believe

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that the radiologist who's reading her films in the

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hospital is part of the hospital?

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Well, the answer is yes.

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The difference would be say, let me give you an example of

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A obstetrical case.

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Woman comes in, has her prenatal obstetrical care, goes

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to the OBS office a dozen times throughout her pregnancy,

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and then that OB delivers the child something bad happens.

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Is the OB under that circumstance part of the hospital?

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Well, probably not. They probably are not

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because it was a private patient.

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You went to the HO office.

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That's probably not, but what if the OB is the covering

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OB during that time for the hospital,

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then the hospital's involved.

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What if the nurses did not notify the doctor

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of a fetal monitor strip problem?

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That's the hospital. It goes back to what we said

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before, it's factory related.

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What's fair here?

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If the, if the physician was completely private,

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handled the whole delivery,

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and there was a problem with the delivery

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that's on the OB and her group.

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If it's something else, if the nurses were involved,

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if the OB was covering several different women,

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they probably are liable under,

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they probably did have the control.

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What is frequent in these cases

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is from the plaintiff's lawyer's perspective, in any

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of the cases that involving serious damages and,

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and firms like, like mine, only take those cases

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in those cases that take serious damages, we're looking

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to make sure our client has

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enough coverage if they are successful in the case,

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and that coverage is always from attending.

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We always look for attending.

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We're looking for nursing

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and we're looking for the institution.

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Most of all, because the institutions will always have the

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larger share of this, and it's an attempt.

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Vicarious liability is an attempt

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to fairly bring in each person in the team

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to see whether they, they individually have liability

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or they have a liability through a parent authority.

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An independent contractor who is an apparent agent

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of the hospital will, will hook in the hospital

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for their vicarious liability and their coverage.

Report

Faculty

David M Yousem, MD, MBA

Professor of Radiology, Vice Chairman and Associate Dean

Johns Hopkins University

Mahla Radmard, MD

Postdoctoral Research Fellow

Johns Hopkins University School of Medicine

Bartholomew Dalton Esq.,

Senior Partner

Dalton & Associates

Judd A. Harwood, JD

Partner

Bradley Arant Boult Cummings LLP