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The Effect of the Rule of Benevolence on the Doctor's Responsibility; Comparative Case Study: Iranian and American Law

The Effect of the Rule of Benevolence on the Doctor's Responsibility; Comparative Case Study: Iranian and American Law

Authors :
Fatemeh Alizadeh
Ardavan Arzhang
Rasoul Rafiee
Source :
پژوهشهای حقوقی, Vol 23, Iss 57, Pp 505-532 (2024)
Publication Year :
2024
Publisher :
Shahr-e- Danesh Research And Study Institute of Law, 2024.

Abstract

The civil responsibility of the doctor in Iranian and American law is based on the theory of fault. With the difference that according to Article 495 of the Islamic Civil Code, the fault of the doctor is assumed and he must prove his innocence. According to the Good Samaritan Laws, to remove the civil and criminal liability from the doctor, the mere act of good faith is sufficient, provided that he has not committed a gross fault, even if there are emergency conditions in the hospital environment or outside of that environment. According to Iran's laws - based on Article 509 of the Islamic Civil Code - including the implementation of the rule of beneficence towards the doctor and the loss of the guarantee from him, in addition to having good intentions, this means that he should not commit fault and aggression in practice. The mere act of good faith only causes his criminal liability (and not civil liability) to be removed. The prohibition of beneficence in citing harm to the benevolent doctor and the conventional proportionality between benevolent action and avoided harm are among the elements of benevolence.

Details

Language :
English, Persian
ISSN :
16829220 and 27170020
Volume :
23
Issue :
57
Database :
Directory of Open Access Journals
Journal :
پژوهشهای حقوقی
Publication Type :
Academic Journal
Accession number :
edsdoj.f14873e19d5f4c22ac8e08f16fe585e8
Document Type :
article
Full Text :
https://doi.org/10.48300/jlr.2022.353233.2130