At the level of French legislation, there is no explicit provision for medical work, but this can be derived from the various provisions of French medical law. Prior to that, the scope of medical work was limited to legal provisions limited to treatment. In the Law of 30 November 1892, medical work was regarded as the treatment of diseases and surgeries only, and was carried out by a non-physician was considered an illegal practice of medicine until the promulgation of the Public Health Act of 24 Which included diagnosis and treatment.
This situation is largely consistent with the classic jurisprudential approach that defines medical work in two essential components: diagnosis and treatment description. However, the content of medical work can be deduced in French law, by reference to the text of article L.4161-1 of the Public Health Act, which punishes the illegal practice of medicine. According to the provision of this article, it is an illegal practice of medicine for any person who is routinely involved in the diagnosis or treatment of the disease through personal work, oral or written consultation or any other method whatsoever or the exercise of any of the acts specified in the Medical Business Code.
Some of the French jurists went on to say that medical work is not just a diagnosis or a cure; it is a violation of the human body, which is done only by a doctor and the like. Just listening or searching for The patient's interest should be considered medical work.
If the French legislation as I mentioned, the organization has been settled for a long time, where the Ministerial Decision of January 6, 1962 set the list of medical acts as:
• Work performed only by doctors or qualified medical assistants, under the direct responsibility and control of a physician, can intervene at any moment.
• The work performed by medical assistants as a quality and quantity of the doctor, but in his absence.
If the therapeutic goal is a traditional condition in the adaptation of medical work, it is no longer the case with contemporary and successive amendments to the French Civil Code, especially Article 3.16, which considers medical prevention merely a justification for the physical integrity of man. This amendment allows for the legal adaptation of the operations performed on mentally ill patients for the purpose of sterilization as well as transsexuals.
This situation is largely consistent with the classic jurisprudential approach that defines medical work in two essential components: diagnosis and treatment description. However, the content of medical work can be deduced in French law, by reference to the text of article L.4161-1 of the Public Health Act, which punishes the illegal practice of medicine. According to the provision of this article, it is an illegal practice of medicine for any person who is routinely involved in the diagnosis or treatment of the disease through personal work, oral or written consultation or any other method whatsoever or the exercise of any of the acts specified in the Medical Business Code.
Some of the French jurists went on to say that medical work is not just a diagnosis or a cure; it is a violation of the human body, which is done only by a doctor and the like. Just listening or searching for The patient's interest should be considered medical work.
If the French legislation as I mentioned, the organization has been settled for a long time, where the Ministerial Decision of January 6, 1962 set the list of medical acts as:
• Work performed only by doctors or qualified medical assistants, under the direct responsibility and control of a physician, can intervene at any moment.
• The work performed by medical assistants as a quality and quantity of the doctor, but in his absence.
If the therapeutic goal is a traditional condition in the adaptation of medical work, it is no longer the case with contemporary and successive amendments to the French Civil Code, especially Article 3.16, which considers medical prevention merely a justification for the physical integrity of man. This amendment allows for the legal adaptation of the operations performed on mentally ill patients for the purpose of sterilization as well as transsexuals.
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medical errors