By Katheryn Tucker | September 29, 2020
"The apportionment statute was enacted 15 years ago, and we're still arguing over it," said winning plaintiff's attorney Bill Stone of the Stone Law Group.
By Greg Land | September 28, 2020
The justices said that at least some of the claims by the parents of a child who suffers from physical and emotional problems may fall outside of Georgia's bar to "wrongful birth" lawsuits.
New Jersey Law Journal | Analysis
By Eric Poe | September 24, 2020
The New Jersey Supreme Court was asked to address when, in a medical malpractice lawsuit, could the statutory requirement that an affidavit must be submitted within 60 days be waived. To this author, the short answer is never.
New York Law Journal | Expert Opinion
By Robert B. Gibson | September 22, 2020
Exploring the extent to which jurors would be allowed to hear testimony from defendant healthcare providers regarding their involvement in the treatment of COVID-19 patients.
By Greg Land | September 21, 2020
The judge said allegations that someone at Peters & Monyak may have hidden a document created an unwaivable conflict with its client.
By P.J. D'Annunzio | David Gialanella | September 11, 2020
A Middlesex County medical malpractice case, Munoz v. Sarkaria, in which a teenager's family claimed he sustained a brain injury while under anesthesia…
By Kenneth Artz | September 3, 2020
Texas Lawyer spoke to Regina G. Morano, the new chief regulatory and compliance officer for Cordant Health Solutions, recently about some of the big issues in her practice area, as well as the trends and opportunities in health care regulatory compliance.
The Legal Intelligencer | News
By P.J. D'Annunzio | August 27, 2020
"This trial and the verdict prove that jury trials can safely resume," the plaintiff's lawyer, Brendan Lupetin of Meyers Evans Lupetin & Unatin, said. "The verdict also proves that if doctors or hospitals are negligent and hurt patients, they won't get a pass just because of the pandemic. Juries will do their job and uphold justice no matter what."
New Jersey Law Journal | Analysis
By By Michelle L. Greenberg, John E. Morrone and Christopher Caltavuturo | August 12, 2020
In response to the COVID-19 pandemic, and the overwhelming need for medical care and front-line responders, federal and state governments have responded by implementing regulations affording immunity to licensed health-care providers.
The Legal Intelligencer | News
By P.J. D'Annunzio | August 6, 2020
The Pennsylvania Superior Court has ruled that a previously undisclosed communication between doctors about a patient's fatal aneurysm tolled the two-year statute of limitations in a wrongful death action.
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