Open Access. Powered by Scholars. Published by Universities.®

Law Commons

Open Access. Powered by Scholars. Published by Universities.®

Articles 1 - 8 of 8

Full-Text Articles in Law

Risk Factors For Hospital Malpractice Exposure: Implications For Managers And Insurers, Harold S. Luft, Patricia P. Katz, Douglas G. Pinney Apr 1991

Risk Factors For Hospital Malpractice Exposure: Implications For Managers And Insurers, Harold S. Luft, Patricia P. Katz, Douglas G. Pinney

Law and Contemporary Problems

The possibility of identifying certain variables that might serve as predictors of above- or below-average medical malpractice claims experience was explored. Results showed that it is possible to identify significant risk factors.


The Antitrust Analysis Of Hospital Mergers And The Transformation Of The Hospital Industry, Jonathan B. Baker Apr 1988

The Antitrust Analysis Of Hospital Mergers And The Transformation Of The Hospital Industry, Jonathan B. Baker

Law and Contemporary Problems

No abstract provided.


Defining Geographic Markets For Hospital Care, Michael A. Morrisey, Frank A. Sloan, Joseph Valvona Apr 1988

Defining Geographic Markets For Hospital Care, Michael A. Morrisey, Frank A. Sloan, Joseph Valvona

Law and Contemporary Problems

No abstract provided.


Antitrust And Hospital Peer Review, James F. Blumstein, Frank A. Sloan Apr 1988

Antitrust And Hospital Peer Review, James F. Blumstein, Frank A. Sloan

Law and Contemporary Problems

No abstract provided.


Alaska’S Quasi-Public Hospitals: The Implications Of Storrs, M. Kathleen Kenyon Jun 1985

Alaska’S Quasi-Public Hospitals: The Implications Of Storrs, M. Kathleen Kenyon

Alaska Law Review

No abstract provided.


Doctors And Hospitals: An Antitrust Perspective On Traditional Relationships, Clark C. Havighurst Dec 1984

Doctors And Hospitals: An Antitrust Perspective On Traditional Relationships, Clark C. Havighurst

Duke Law Journal

Under new pressures for cost containment, hospitals are increasingly asserting interests that conflict with those of physicians. Professor Havighurst argues that legal rules under which practitioners have challenged denials of hospital admitting privileges should be clarified in order that hospitals can more effectively carry out their new cost-containment and other responsibilities. He invokes antitrust law's "essential-facilities" doctrine to protect those abused by their competitors on a hospital staff, but he contends that, if a hospital participates in decisionmaking as an independent actor--even though it acts in concert with its physicians--, antitrust courts should lower the level of scrutiny to a …


Title Vi Of The 1964 Civil Rights Act And The Closing Of A Public Hospital, Mitchell A. Horwich Dec 1981

Title Vi Of The 1964 Civil Rights Act And The Closing Of A Public Hospital, Mitchell A. Horwich

Duke Law Journal

No abstract provided.


Regulating The Diffusion Of Hospital Technologies, Louise B. Russell Jan 1979

Regulating The Diffusion Of Hospital Technologies, Louise B. Russell

Law and Contemporary Problems

No abstract provided.