What to know
- Duty to warn is a legal concept that indicates possible liability for healthcare providers if no warning of possible harm is given in certain circumstances.
Does duty to warn apply to healthcare providers and STI diagnoses?
- A duty to warn exists across various United States (U.S.) jurisdictions.
- Within the healthcare field, duty to warn can create an obligation for healthcare providers to warn people who are not their patients (e.g., third parties) of a serious threat of harm based on conversations with their patient.
- It has been suggested that this duty may extend to infectious diseases, including sexually transmitted diseases (STIs).
- In a few U.S. jurisdictions, an STI diagnosis may create various physician duties that indirectly extend to people who are not their patients.
- A direct duty to warn third parties that they may need a medical examination because of their potential STI exposure was not found across states, despite its existence for other serious medical conditions.
Background
What is duty to warn in health law?
In the area of health law, duty to warn describes a physician's responsibility to warn an identifiable third party of a potential serious threat of harm to their health. It is based on findings from a widely referenced case: Tarasoff v. Regents of the University of California, in which a court found that a psychologist should have warned his patient's girlfriend after his patient told the psychologist of his intention to kill her, despite the competing consideration of physician/patient confidentiality.
In the U.S., a diagnosed case of certain sexually transmitted infections (STIs) can trigger:
- reporting by the healthcare provider to the state/local government.
- investigation by the health department (partner notification, contact tracing, etc.) BUT not always.
Although many healthcare providers engaged in STI prevention, diagnosis, and treatment might believe an actual duty to warn law exists in all or most of the states around the country, in reality, very few states have laws or regulations in place specific to common bacterial STIs (e.g., chlamydia, gonorrhea, and syphilis).
The only action that physicians are required to take beyond diagnosis and treatment of their patient is reporting the case to the state or local health department, per the laws of their state. Physician duties generally do not extend to sex partners of diagnosed patients, and as a result, sex partners are not always notified. Some states may require additional reporting of suspected cases, which can include partners of diagnosed patients.
Many state health departments, however, often use partner notification and contact tracing — two integral components of partner services — to break the chain of STI transmission because these strategies can help pinpoint the window of possible infection. They are most often used when syphilis is the STI in question because of the serious, long-term health risks associated with non-treatment. Limited partner notification services for other STIs (e.g., gonorrhea and chlamydia) may be conducted based on health department resources. Health departments also can encourage patients to notify their partners or provide patients with medication for their partners—a practice known as expedited partner therapy (EPT). All patients diagnosed with an STI are covered by patient confidentiality, and specially trained health department staff conduct contact tracing and partner notification while maintaining confidentiality. These activities are widely seen as effective in reducing the STI burden in communities and are supported by CDC.
What is the bottom-line regarding duty to warn for STIs in the U.S.?
Currently, partner notification and other activities that could be interpreted as warnings are limited to health departments, while healthcare providers' duties focus on their patients. However, three states do impose legal duties on the healthcare provider/patient relationship for third parties, even if these states do not require a warning. These legal duties vary in each of the three states:
- "An effort, through the cooperation of the patient," should be made to bring the third party in for examination and treatment.
- If the physician does not have evidence that the third party received treatment within 10 days, the physician must report the suspected case to the health department (17 CCR § 2636).
- If a patient identifies a third party as someone potentially exposed, this suspected case should be reported to the local or state health department.
- Physicians should “make reasonable efforts to prevent the spread of disease to others,” which could include third party notification depending on the circumstances. However, 1-007.02B1 makes clear that the state or local health department perform partner notification and referrals, which means the provider’s duty is likely limited to health department reporting and actions directed to their patient (i.e., counseling and linkage to care and treatment) (Neb. Admin. R. & Regs. Tit. 173, Ch. 1, § 1-007).
If a patient identifies a third party as someone potentially exposed, this “suspected case” should be reported to the local health officer (410 IAC 1-2.5-75).
Special considerations
Ultimately, a bacterial STI diagnosis does not automatically trigger a legal requirement for duty to warn because these STIs do not typically represent an imminent danger of serious bodily harm. Currently, the most common bacterial STIs are relatively easily cured with a single or short course of antibiotics. Additionally, practical reasons exist for not routinely performing a duty to warn for STIs, including:
- Privacy laws prohibit healthcare providers from sharing patient information. Partner notification must ensure partner anonymity. Health departments are trained in the guidelines for partner notification.
- EPT, which is legal in almost every state, is an effective strategy for reaching partners of newly diagnosed patients.
- Partner notification takes time and financial resources, which could make it difficult for a provider to accept this responsibility. This effort is most often handled by health departments as part of their regular practices.
The responsibility for STI reporting and partner notification currently lies in the hands of individual states – there is no universal duty to warn law in place at the present time, although STI diagnoses do sometimes trigger actions beyond the physician's care of their patient and may involve consideration of the care of their patient's sex partner.