rechoboam
Active Member
- Joined
- Aug 9, 2010
- Posts
- 930
There is benefit to being called “Mr” as my surgical colleagues occasionally remind me.
I don’t pay much attention to what legal liabilities await in judgement of my medical assistance. If I can help, I’ll help.
But as my bookings are always Mr, no one will know except for QF who despite the Mr pronoun has me in the iPad as a doctor.
Most Australian medical professional indemnity will cover Good Samaritan acts internationally.
They won’t spring you out of a Dubai jail if you do CPR on an Emir who subsequently dies though. If we’re talking about Western countries I wouldn’t be worried in the slightest - there’s medical indemnity, there’s the fact that common law countries require negligence for a successful lawsuit, there’s Good Samaritan laws themselves especially in the US and the bar is pretty high for proving negligence when you are 30k feet up without much useful equipment or diagnostics. The problem is when you are dragged into some horrendous minefield in some country that doesn’t function the way ours does.