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Full-Text Articles in Law

Furthering The Fiduciary Metaphor: The Duty Of Providers To The Payers Of Medicare, Isaac ("Zack") D. Buck Oct 2016

Furthering The Fiduciary Metaphor: The Duty Of Providers To The Payers Of Medicare, Isaac ("Zack") D. Buck

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Five years and two near-death experiences later, the Patient Protection and Affordable Care Act of 2010 (ACA) has restructured the delivery of American health care. It has provided coverage to millions of Americans who previously did not have it, outlawed discrimination in the insurance marketplace, and armed the patient with consumer-based tools to streamline their care. Its positive impact is being seen throughout the country. But it can only go so far. Separate from the goal of providing access, the most daunting challenge facing American health care, and particularly, Medicare, is controlling expenditures and utilization in an era of unprecedented …


What Is (And Isn't) Healthism, Jessica L. Roberts, Elizabeth Weeks Leonard Apr 2016

What Is (And Isn't) Healthism, Jessica L. Roberts, Elizabeth Weeks Leonard

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What does it mean to discriminate on the basis of health status? Health is, of course, relevant in a number of ways. It can speak to the length of our lives, our ability to perform mentally and physically, our need for health care, and our risk of injury and incapacity. But the mere relevance of a particular attribute does mean that considering it should be legally permissible. Moreover, the potential harms that may result from health-status discrimination raise important moral questions. This Essay explores when differentiating on the basis of health is socially acceptable and, by contrast, when it is …


Overtreatment And Informed Consent: A Fraud-Based Solution To Unwanted And Unnecessary Care, Isaac ("Zack") D. Buck Apr 2016

Overtreatment And Informed Consent: A Fraud-Based Solution To Unwanted And Unnecessary Care, Isaac ("Zack") D. Buck

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According to multiple accounts, the administration of American health care results in as much as $800 billion in wasted spending due largely to the provision of overly expensive, inefficient, and unnecessary services. Beyond inflicting fiscal pain on the nation’s pocketbook, this waste has no clinical benefit — and often results in unnecessary hospital stays, cascading follow-up procedures, and time-wasting inconvenience for American patients. But aside from the mere annoyance of unnecessary care, the administration of overtreatment — that is, unnecessary care in and of itself — causes harm to the patient. Excessive care is deficient care. Unnecessary care risks potential …


Gambling Disorder, Vulnerability, And The Law: Mapping The Field, Stacey A. Tovino Jan 2016

Gambling Disorder, Vulnerability, And The Law: Mapping The Field, Stacey A. Tovino

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This Article seeks to descriptively map the sub-field of gambling disorder and the law and ask whether individuals with gambling disorder are vulnerable under the law. Like other scholarship that descriptively maps ethical, legal, and social implications of lesser known conditions and developments, this Article seeks to describe the treatment of individuals with gambling disorder in a variety of illustrative, but not exhaustive, legal contexts, to identify the limited scholarship assessing the application of the law to individuals with gambling disorder, and to invite members of the health law academy to bring their significant expertise to bear on these issues …