(1) As used in this section and ORS § 30.805, ’emergency medical assistance’ means:

Terms Used In Oregon Statutes 30.800

  • Damages: Money paid by defendants to successful plaintiffs in civil cases to compensate the plaintiffs for their injuries.
  • Person: includes individuals, corporations, associations, firms, partnerships, limited liability companies and joint stock companies. See Oregon Statutes 174.100

(a) Medical or dental care not provided in a place where emergency medical or dental care is regularly available, including but not limited to a hospital, industrial first-aid station or the office of a physician, naturopathic physician, physician assistant or dentist, given voluntarily and without the expectation of compensation to an injured person who is in need of immediate medical or dental care and under emergency circumstances that suggest that the giving of assistance is the only alternative to death or serious physical aftereffects; or

(b) Medical care provided voluntarily in good faith and without expectation of compensation by a physician licensed under ORS Chapter 677, a physician assistant licensed under ORS § 677.505 to 677.525, a nurse practitioner licensed under ORS § 678.375 to 678.390 or a naturopathic physician licensed under ORS Chapter 685 and in the person’s professional capacity as a provider of health care for an athletic team at a public or private school or college athletic event or as a volunteer provider of health care at other athletic events.

(2) No person may maintain an action for damages for injury, death or loss that results from acts or omissions of a person while rendering emergency medical assistance unless it is alleged and proved by the complaining party that the person was grossly negligent in rendering the emergency medical assistance.

(3) The giving of emergency medical assistance by a person does not, of itself, establish a professional relationship between the person giving the assistance and the person receiving the assistance insofar as the relationship carries with it any duty to provide or arrange for further medical care for the injured person after the giving of emergency medical assistance. [1967 c.266 1,2; 1973 c.635 § 1; 1979 c.576 § 1; 1979 c.731 § 1; 1983 c.771 § 1; 1983 c.779 § 1; 1985 c.428 § 1; 1989 c.782 § 35; 1997 c.242 § 1; 1997 c.751 § 11; 2013 c.688 § 8; 2014 c.45 § 3; 2017 c.356 § 2]

 

[1999 c.220 § 1; repealed by 2005 c.551 § 8]