Nevada Code § 200.495

Definitions; penalties
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1. A professional caretaker who fails to provide
such service, care or supervision as is reasonable and necessary to maintain
the health or safety of a patient is guilty of criminal neglect of a patient
if:
(a) The act or omission is aggravated, reckless
or gross;
(b) The act or omission is such a departure from
what would be the conduct of an ordinarily prudent, careful person under the
same circumstances that it is contrary to a proper regard for danger to human
life or constitutes indifference to the resulting consequences;
(c) The consequences of the negligent act or
omission could have reasonably been foreseen; and
(d) The danger to human life was not the result
of inattention, mistaken judgment or misadventure, but the natural and probable
result of an aggravated reckless or grossly negligent act or omission.
2. Unless a more severe penalty is
prescribed by law for the act or omission which brings about the neglect, a
person who commits criminal neglect of a patient:
(a) If the neglect results in death, is guilty of
a category B felony and shall be punished by imprisonment in the state prison
for a minimum term of not less than 1 year and a maximum term of not more than
20 years.
(b) If the neglect results in substantial bodily
harm, is guilty of a category B felony and shall be punished by imprisonment in
the state prison for a minimum term of not less than 1 year and a maximum term
of not more than 6 years, or by a fine of not more than $5,000, or by both fine
and imprisonment.
(c) If the neglect does not result in death or
substantial bodily harm, is guilty of a gross misdemeanor.
3. For the purposes of this section, a
patient is not neglected for the sole reason that:
(a) According to the patients desire, the
patient is being furnished with treatment by spiritual means through prayer
alone in accordance with the tenets and practices of a church or religious
denomination. Subsection 1 does not authorize or require any medical care or
treatment over the implied or express objection of such a patient.
(b) Life-sustaining treatment was withheld or
withdrawn in accordance with a valid declaration by the patient or his or her
agent pursuant to NRS 162A.790 .
4. Upon the conviction of a person for a
violation of the provisions of subsection 1, the Attorney General shall give
notice of the conviction to the licensing boards which:
(a) Licensed the facility in which the criminal
neglect occurred; and
(b) If applicable, licensed the person so
convicted.
5. As used in this section:
(a) Medical facility has the meaning ascribed
to it in NRS 449.0151 .
(b) Patient means a person who resides or
receives health care in a medical facility.
(c) Professional caretaker means a person who:
(1) Holds a license, registration or
permit issued pursuant to title 54 or chapter 449 of NRS;
(2) Is employed by, an agent of or under
contract to perform services for, a medical facility; and
(3) Has responsibility to provide care to
patients.
The term
does not include a person who is not involved in the day-to-day operation or
management of a medical facility unless that person has actual knowledge of the
criminal neglect of a patient and takes no action to cure such neglect.

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