By Jon Lomurro and Abbott Brown | July 24, 2017
There are three cases holding that the "technical mistake" of not obtaining both general letters of administration and letters of administration ad prosequendum can be cured at any stage of the litigation.
By Charles Toutant | July 24, 2017
The Supreme Court has ordered the state's largest health insurance company to turn over consultant reports and other materials it relied on when establishing its two-tier OMNIA system to hospitals relegated to the second tier. The justices overturned a decision by the Appellate Division that denied the discovery request, rejecting the panel's conclusion that the broad discovery request was not warranted because the challenge to the OMNIA system lacked merit.
By Charles Toutant | July 21, 2017
A federal judge has awarded legal fees to a hospital as the prevailing party in an ex-employee's whistleblower claim after the plaintiff could not name any laws or regulations broken by the defendant.
By njlawjournal | New Jersey Law Journal | July 20, 2017
Unauthorized Disclosure of Medical Information Constituted Injury to Requestor of Application of Two-Year Limitations Period
By njlawjournal | New Jersey Law Journal | July 20, 2017
Employee's Absences Created Factual Dispute Over Whether She Was Actually Performing Her Job upon Termination
By Amanda Bronstad | July 18, 2017
A newly available transcript from St. Louis Civil Court shows just how quickly the U.S. Supreme Court's game-changing decision in Bristol-Myers Squibb v. Superior Court of California transformed a Missouri case over the alleged link between talcum powder and cancer.
By Michael Booth | July 14, 2017
A two-year statute of limitations applies to an HIV-positive patient who claims one of his doctors improperly disclosed his medical status to a third party without his consent, a New Jersey appeals court has ruled.
By Amanda Bronstad | July 12, 2017
Plaintiffs lawyers hoping to revive 3,128 lawsuits over cholesterol drug Lipitor are asking an appeals court to overturn what they consider to be a heightened standard on expert evidence that could hasten the demise of other multidistrict litigation.
By Michael Booth | July 12, 2017
A nurse will be allowed to pursue her claim that she was fired by a hospital because of a belief that she was physically unable to perform her job, the New Jersey Supreme Court ruled on Tuesday.
By Kristen Rasmussen | July 11, 2017
Rebecca Shanahan of Avella Specialty Pharmacy spoke to Corporate Counsel about her career path and getting to the C-suite.
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