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Telemedicine in the Era of COVID-19: What Does It Mean for Med Mal Litigation? Use of telemedicine expanded during the COVID-19 pandemic, and this expansion is expected to stay. Medical malpractice attorneys must be mindful of telemedicine's scope and liability implications. By Jeffrey Krawitz and Michael Ksiazek

What a Medical Provider Should Do When a Patient Is Threatening a Lawsuit When medical providers are threatened with lawsuits, there are important steps they can take to protect their best interests. This article is intended to serve as a summary of best practices for physicians who have been threatened with a medical malpractice lawsuit. By Keith Roberts

Why Recent Medical Malpractice Decisions Make You Less Safe Medication errors, while preventable, aren't necessarily criminal. Where people are going to be charged for ordinary negligence, the undesired and undesirable end result will be doctors and nurses unwilling to admit their medical mistakes with the looming prospect of criminal prosecution and jail time, By Aron Solomon

How Personal Injury Cases Are Taxed The tax treatment of personal injury settlements and verdicts is widely misunderstood, but the rule is actually simple. By Kevin O'Brien

Appeals Court Sides With Personal Injury Attorneys in 'Chance of Survival' Dispute  An appeals panel in the Fourth Circuit found the standard was misapplied when the lower court calculated the deceased woman's chance of survival. By Brad Kutner