Latest Med-Mal Insurance News & Research
For some, it no longer pays to be a surgeon
By LISA GREENE, Times Staff Writer http://www.sptimes.com TAMPA – Dr. Jack Brock still wears blue surgical scrubs each day, even though he no longer needs them. That’s because Brock, once the respected director of cardiac surgery at Tampa General Hospital, no longer spends his days stitching arteries and removing lung tumors. Instead, he has joined […]
Hmong doctor opens pioneering practice
Fenglaly Lee is Fresno’s first female Hmong OB/GYN. By Vanessa Colón / The Fresno Bee http://www.fresnobee.com Dr. Fenglaly Lee grew up as a refugee in Fresno living on welfare and harvesting Asian vegetables on the weekends. Now, she is delivering babies as the first female Hmong OB/GYN doctor in the central San Joaquin Valley and […]
The year ahead
State’s new business is much the same as the old http://www.telegram.com The election of Massachusetts’ first Democratic governor in 16 years prompted predictions of massive change on Beacon Hill in 2007. After a year of political sparring between the administration and legislative leaders, there remains a heaping plate of unfinished business to tackle. Still pending […]
Ruling will force cuts in programs
TED SICKINGER The Oregonian Staff Oregon Health & Science University faces a multimillion dollar annual budget hit after a court ruling Friday that effectively eliminated a state cap on malpractice and other awards for damages. That’s an expense that the institution can ill afford as it attempts to bolster hospital profits and reduce big losses […]
Increase in lawsuits discourages obstetricians from delivering babies
By Frank Donnelly THE ADVANCE (STATEN ISLAND, N.Y.) http://www.statesman.com Ten years from now, many babies could be delivered by doctors who are total strangers to the mothers. Medical malpractice insurance for obstetricians and gynecologists could become so expensive that only hospitals — and the doctors under their insurance umbrellas — could afford coverage for birthings. […]
Aetna to End Payment for a Drug in Colonoscopies
By BARNABY J. FEDER NY TIMES www.nytimes.com Aetna, one of the nation’s largest private health plan managers, is the latest insurer to clamp down on the use of a powerful anesthetic during an increasingly common form of colon cancer screening. The company will send a letter to doctors on Friday, saying that it plans to […]
Limits on damages for pain are upheld by Ohio Supreme Court
http://toledoblade.com By JIM PROVANCE BLADE COLUMBUS BUREAU CHIEF In a decision hailed by the business community and decried by trial lawyers, the Ohio Supreme Court yesterday upheld a controversial 2004 state law limiting damages for pain, suffering, and other non-economic damages in product liability and other lawsuits. The much anticipated 5-2 ruling was in response […]
Rendell scores some modest victories in expanded health care push
By MARTHA RAFFAELE (AP) Gov. Ed Rendell could not persuade state lawmakers this year to embrace the cornerstone of his sweeping health care reform plan: expanding state-subsidized health coverage to roughly 800,000 uninsured adults. But his administration won some smaller victories in its effort to lower the cost and improve the quality and availability of […]
Lawmakers Deride Plan for Fees on Doctors
By E.B. SOLOMONT Staff Reporter of the Sun Several New York lawmakers are joining doctors in denouncing a proposal floated by the state’s insurance superintendent, Eric Dinallo, in an interview with The New York Sun, of a $50,000 fee on every doctor in the state as a solution to New York’s malpractice insurance crisis. “This […]
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