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Full-Text Articles in Law
Health Courts: Panacea Or Palliative?, Carl W. Tobias
Health Courts: Panacea Or Palliative?, Carl W. Tobias
University of Richmond Law Review
No abstract provided.
Mid-Atlantic Ethics Committee Newsletter, Fall 2005-Winter 2006
Mid-Atlantic Ethics Committee Newsletter, Fall 2005-Winter 2006
Mid-Atlantic Ethics Committee Newsletter
No abstract provided.
Blame Canada (And The Rest Of The World): The Twenty-Year War On Imported Prescription Drugs, Daniel L. Pollock
Blame Canada (And The Rest Of The World): The Twenty-Year War On Imported Prescription Drugs, Daniel L. Pollock
ExpressO
Rising budget deficits and sticker shock over the new Medicare drug benefit have put the issue of prescription drug costs back into the spotlight. The growth in the cost of prescription drugs continues to represent a staggering burden for taxpayer-funded health care programs, even while costs of non-drug health care services have slowed or even decreased. Among the many proposals for cutting prescription drug costs, drug importation is unique. Although bipartisan support for drug importation has existed in Congress for over five years, the federal government continues to maintain that a system of safe and effective drug importation is impossible. …
Mid-Atlantic Ethics Committee Newsletter, Summer 2005
Mid-Atlantic Ethics Committee Newsletter, Summer 2005
Mid-Atlantic Ethics Committee Newsletter
No abstract provided.
Autonomy And End Of Life Decision Making: Reflections Of A Lawyer And A Daughter, Ray D. Madoff
Autonomy And End Of Life Decision Making: Reflections Of A Lawyer And A Daughter, Ray D. Madoff
ExpressO
This short essay reflects upon end of life decision making from both a legal perspective as well as from the perspective of a family member living the experience of facing end of life decisions of a loved one. Most importantly, the reflections focus on the vast gulf that exists between these two perspectives.
Hard Cases And The Politics Of Righteousness, Carl E. Schneider
Hard Cases And The Politics Of Righteousness, Carl E. Schneider
Articles
The law of bioethics has been the law of cases. Interpreting the common law and the Constitution, judges have written the law of informed consent, abortion, and assisted suicide. Reacting to causes célèbres, legislatures have written the law of advance directives and end of life decisions. The long, sad death of Terri Schiavo eclipsed even the long, sad deaths of Karen Ann Quinlan and Nancy Beth Cruzan in the duration and strength of the attention and passions it evoked. What are Schiavo’s lessons? Hard cases, lawyers say, make bad law. Why? First, hard cases are atypical cases. They present abnormal …
Consumer-Directed Health Care And The Chronically Ill, John V. Jacobi
Consumer-Directed Health Care And The Chronically Ill, John V. Jacobi
University of Michigan Journal of Law Reform
Insurance plans with consumer-controlled spending accounts are advocated as tools for reducing health costs and empowering consumers. This Article describes their recent development and argues that they are likely to fail. Instead of focusing on the small number of consumers with chronic illnesses who account for the bulk of health spending they focus on the majority of relatively well consumers. This Article proposes market-based and regulatory changes focused on high-cost patients. To best serve cost and quality goals, health finance responsibility should be divided between consumers and their employers for predictable and routine costs, and government for chronic and catastrophic …
Mid-Atlantic Ethics Committee Newsletter, Spring 2005
Mid-Atlantic Ethics Committee Newsletter, Spring 2005
Mid-Atlantic Ethics Committee Newsletter
No abstract provided.
The Politics Of Infertility: Recognizing Coverage Exclusions As Discrimination, Elizabeth Pendo
The Politics Of Infertility: Recognizing Coverage Exclusions As Discrimination, Elizabeth Pendo
All Faculty Scholarship
Infertility affects approximately ten percent of the reproductive-age population in the United States, and strikes people of every race, ethnicity and socio-economic level. It is recognized by the medical community as a disease, one with devastating physical, psychological, and financial effects.
In 1998, the Supreme Court held in Bragdon v. Abbott that reproduction is a major life activity within the meaning of the ADA. Many lawyers, activists and scholars thought that coverage for infertility treatment would follow soon after. In fact, in 2003 in the first major case applying Bragdon to health benefits, Saks v. Franklin Covey, the Second Circuit …
Do Different Types Of Hospitals Act Differently?, Jill R. Horwitz
Do Different Types Of Hospitals Act Differently?, Jill R. Horwitz
Other Publications
This essay is based on testimony delivered before the U.S. House of Representatives Committee on Ways and Means on May 26, 2005.