New Jersey Law Journal | Analysis
By Armand Leone Jr. and E. Drew Britcher | May 7, 2021
When a primary care physician fails to appropriately document smoking history and/or fails to offer lung cancer screening to eligible patients today, such conduct falls below the standard of care.
New Jersey Law Journal | Analysis
By David Gialanella | May 6, 2021
"If we're going to see a COVID-related employment law line of cases, it's going to be in two areas:" mandatory vaccines and workplace safety, one employment lawyer says.
New Jersey Law Journal | Analysis
By Patricia M. Giordano | May 6, 2021
When a client presents under circumstances where charitable immunity at first blush would unjustly limit recovery to $250,000, strategic thinking and innovative lawyering may make all the difference in maximizing the value of your case.
New Jersey Law Journal | Analysis
By Eric S. Poe | May 6, 2021
The author proposes a rule amendment to preclude a "redo" of expert testimony. Simply stated: If a witness is unavailable, and a de bene esse deposition is completed, that witness cannot become "re-available" to testify live at trial.
New Jersey Law Journal | Analysis
By Heather M. LaBombardi and Nataliana A. Guida | May 6, 2021
If a plaintiff's fundamental cause of action sounds in professional negligence against a "licensed person," he or she may not evade the AOM requirement by suing only a public entity, and not the individual "licensed person." But what about the alleged medical negligence of an unlicensed person?
New Jersey Law Journal | Analysis
By R. Jason Richards | May 5, 2021
An important look at the standard for assessing medical causality, including the Bradford-Hill factors and U.S. Supreme Court precedent.
New Jersey Law Journal | Analysis
By Jordan S. Goldsmith and Lee S. Goldsmith | May 5, 2021
It is not uncommon to find a physician with one or more subspecialty doing work in one of them or none of them. Many physicians are being tasked, incentivized and sometimes required, to sub-specialize, since sub-specialists earn more than generalists, and those performing procedures earn more money than those who do not. When it comes time to review the appropriateness of an AOM, each subspecialty suddenly becomes important though it may be irrelevant.
New Jersey Law Journal | Analysis
By Justin Henry | May 5, 2021
"There's a difference between positioning yourself for a diverse candidate pool and actually looking at the diversity you're actually able to achieve," Lloyd Freeman said.
The American Lawyer | Analysis|News
By Andrew Maloney | May 4, 2021
"My name was put into a pitch package. [W]e'd get the work and then, I'd never see it," said one woman of color who was quoted in an ABA report released this week.
The American Lawyer | Analysis
By Dylan Jackson | May 3, 2021
Reports of anxiety and depression rose notably in this year's ALM 2021 Mental Health and Substance Abuse Survey as lawyers and staff feel isolated and overworked.
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