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Our Ethical Commitment

Code of Ethics

The standard of conduct every correctional health professional carries into every encounter, behind every door.

Preamble

Correctional health professionals are obligated to respect human dignity and act in ways that merit trust and prevent harm. They must ensure autonomy in decisions about their inmate-patients and promote a safe environment.

Respect human dignity Merit trust Prevent harm Ensure autonomy Promote safety
01

Confidentiality

Ensure that all medical information is confidential and health care records are maintained and transported in a confidential manner.

02

Justified treatment & informed consent

Render medical treatment only when it is justified by an accepted medical diagnosis. Treatment and invasive procedures shall be rendered after informed consent.

03

The right to refuse care

Afford inmates the right to refuse care and treatment. Involuntary treatment shall be reserved for emergency situations in which there is a grave disability and immediate threat of danger to the inmate or others.

04

Care regardless of custody status

Provide health care to all inmates regardless of custody status.

05

A patient in every encounter

Evaluate the inmate as a patient or client in each and every health care encounter.

06

No role in executions

Not be involved in any aspect of execution of the death penalty.

07

Specimens for diagnosis only

Collect and analyze specimens only for diagnostic testing based on sound medical principles.

08

Privacy of sight and sound

Provide privacy of sight and sound to the degree possible without creating a risk to the provider or other individuals.

09

Body-cavity searches

Perform body cavity searches only after training in proper techniques and when they are not in a patient-provider relationship with the inmate.

10

Honest identification

Identify themselves to their patients and not represent themselves as other than their professional license or certification permits.

11

Separation from custody functions

Honor custody functions but not participate in such activities as escorting inmates, forced transfers, security supervision, strip searches, or witnessing use of force.

12

Ethical research

Undertake biomedical research on prisoners only when the research methods meet all federal guideline requirements (45 CFR 46) for experimentation on human subjects and individual prisoners or prison populations are expected to derive benefits from the results of the research.

Standards worth upholding

These principles are the mission, made practical.

The ACCP exists to advance and defend this standard of care for correctional physicians and their patients alike.