CRIMINAL LAW REVIEW OF PATIENT MALPRACTICE WHICH USED AS CONTENT BY HEALTH WORKERS

WIJAYA, EMILIA METTA KARUNIA (2023) CRIMINAL LAW REVIEW OF PATIENT MALPRACTICE WHICH USED AS CONTENT BY HEALTH WORKERS. Criminal Law Review of Patient Malpractice Which Used as Content by Health Workers, 5 (6). pp. 50-60. ISSN 2964-741X

[img]
Preview
Text
Criminal Law Review of Patient Malpractice which used as Content by Health Workers.pdf

Download (210kB) | Preview
Official URL: https://conference.unita.ac.id/index.php/conferenc...

Abstract

This research is a criminal law review of the baby's photo content without permission by health workers and a criminal law review of malpractice by health workers that causes death. This research is normative legal research because the problem is the object of this legal research. This research uses library research methodology. The research's results explain that criminal law regulations regarding baby photo content without permission by health workers were not comprehensively regulated in Law No. 17 of 2023 concerning Health Law. Patients have the privacy rights to their health data information in the Health Law regulation. Unfortunately, criminal sanctions regulations relating to patient privacy are regulated separately from government regulations. As we know, the Health Law will only be promulgated in 2023 so there are no government regulations yet that regulate criminal offenses regarding patient health secrets. Criminal law regulations regarding baby photo content without permission by health workers have been comprehensively regulated by Law No. 27 of 2023 concerning Personal Data Protection and Law No. 28 of 2014 concerning Copyright. Criminal law regulations regarding malpractice by health workers, including health workers resulting in death, are regulated in Article 359 of the Criminal Code. Article 359 of the Criminal Code can be overridden by Law No. 17 of 2023 concerning Health Law. Based on Article 308 Paragraph (1) Law No. 17 of 2023, in the case of health workers suspected of committing unlawful health services that may be subject to criminal sanctions, the first recommendation must be requested by the assembly. The conclusion is the recommendations from this panel are the benchmark for imposing criminal sanctions on health workers

Item Type: Article
Subjects: 300 Social Sciences > 340 Law > 345 Criminal law
Divisions: Faculty of Law and Communication
Depositing User: Ms Emilia Metta Karunia Wijaya
Date Deposited: 18 Mar 2024 05:46
Last Modified: 26 Mar 2024 04:23
URI: http://repository.unika.ac.id/id/eprint/34824

Actions (login required)

View Item View Item