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Health care and the law

October 2002 | Volume 38, Issue 10

Subrogation traps for vulnerable plaintiffs
J. Thomas Henretta

Sometimes an injured plaintiff wins compensation, only to see the award whittled away when Medicare or Medicaid seeks reimbursement for its expenditures on the plaintiff's behalf. Though the law is complicated, you can step carefully around subrogation traps and protect your client's recovery.

Can the law handle human cloning?
Justine Durrell

As science spirals steadily into the future, the law must keep pace. Human cloning may seem only a remote possibility, but scholars, lawyers, and ethicists are already considering its mind-boggling implications. The author scours existing law for clues to how the courts might approach cloning-related litigation.

Failure to treat pain: no more excuses
Barry R. Furrow

Patients in severe pain deserve to have their suffering relieved. But poor medical education, inadequate insurance coverage, and a fear of prescribing potentially addictive drugs make health care providers hesitant to treat pain aggressively. The threat of tort liability can pressure practitioners to improve pain management.

Health care records: books open to abuse
Interview with Joanne Hustead

Who's looking at your clients' medical records—or your own? What protections shield patients' most personal health information in the Internet Age? In this interview, the senior counsel of Georgetown University's Health Privacy Project explains why greater privacy protections for medical information will promote better health care for all.

So you're stuck with ERISA . . . Now what?
Mark D. DeBofsky

It happens sometimes: You try to dodge the bullet, but the court rules that the Employee Retirement Income Security Act governs the case. Never fear—you can still help your client challenge an insurer's unfair denial of benefits. Learn how to navigate the administrative process, what standard of review courts apply, and what your client can recover under the act.

Features

Make time palpable by using per diem arguments
Thomas J. Vesper and Richard Orr

A victim of serious injury must live with its effects-often for years, sometimes for a lifetime. Help jurors understand the client's pain and suffering and other intangible damages by using exhibits that break down his or her difficult future into an expanse of months, weeks, or even days.

How to protect damages in federal tort cases
Michael E. J. Archuleta and Laurie M. Higginbotham

When your client has been injured by a federal government employee's negligence, you'd better bone up on the Federal Tort Claims Act. The author explains how to meet the challenges of this litigation to secure and retain a just damages award.

News & Trends

New Cox-2 pain relievers are marketing marvel, not miracle drugs

Hospitals, doctors may be liable for contractors' negligence

Lawyer discovers evidence at Internet auctions

Discovery subpoena to foreign witness is valid, Second Circuit rules

'Younger' workers can sue under ADEA, Sixth Circuit finds

California high court limits immunity for Big Tobacco

Departments

President's page
Corporate greed

Washington focus
Grand illusion

Supreme Court review
The Court's curious consent search doctrine

Good counsel

Discoveries

Quotes

Classifieds

Classifieds

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