Article R4312-59 of the French Public Health Code
Nurses may work in a salaried or self-employed capacity. They may also work in a dual capacity.
Home | French Legislation Articles | Part four: Health professions | Book III: Medical auxiliaries, nursing auxiliaries, childcare auxiliaries, ambulance drivers and dental assistants | Title I: Profession of nurse | Chapter II: Nursing ethics | Section 5: Rules relating to different types of practice
Nurses may work in a salaried or self-employed capacity. They may also work in a dual capacity.
Nurses are free to provide care free of charge.
Embezzlement and attempted embezzlement are prohibited.
Employed nurses, whether bound to their employer by a contract or employed in a public setting, must not take advantage of their duties to increase their personal clientele.
Nurses, whatever their status, are required to respect their professional duties and in particular their obligations concerning professional secrecy and the independence of their decisions. Under no circumstances may nurses accept restrictions on their professional independence from their employer. Wherever they practise, they must always act first and foremost in the interests of public health, people and their safety.
The salaried nurse may not, under any circumstances, accept that his or her remuneration or the duration of his or her employment depend, in whole or in part, on standards of productivity, hourly output or any other provision which would have the effect of limiting or abandoning his or her independence or undermining the quality or safety of care.
I.-In accordance with the provisions of article L. 4113-9, the practice of the nursing profession in any form whatsoever within a company, local authority or institution governed by private law is subject to a written contract. This contract defines the respective obligations of the parties and specifies the means that will enable the professional to comply with the provisions of this Code of Deontology. II – Any contract, renewal of…
The habitual practice of the nursing profession, in any form whatsoever, within a State administration, a local authority or a public establishment is subject to a written contract, except in cases where the professional is a permanent employee of the State, a local authority or a public establishment and in cases where it is governed by legislative or regulatory provisions which do not provide for the conclusion of a contract….
At the place where they practise, nurses have suitable facilities and appropriate technical means to ensure that they are received, that care is properly provided, that patients are safe and that professional secrecy is respected. In particular, they must ensure that the medical devices they use are sterilised and decontaminated and that healthcare waste is disposed of in accordance with regulatory procedures. They must not practise their profession in conditions…
A nurse may not move into a building where another nurse is practising without the latter’s agreement or, failing that, without the authorisation of the Conseil Départemental de l’Ordre. Such authorisation may only be refused on grounds of risk of confusion for the public. Silence on the part of the departmental council will be deemed to constitute tacit authorisation on expiry of a period of two months from receipt of…
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is a Registered Trademark of
PETROFF LAW FIRM (SELARL LEGASTRAT)
182, rue de Rivoli
75001, Paris France
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is a Registered Trademark of
PETROFF LAW FIRM (SELARL LEGASTRAT)
182, rue de Rivoli
75001, Paris France
RCS Paris n°814433470
Paris Bar Registration n° (Toque) C2396
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