This paper seeks to determine if moving from a no-fault auto insurance system to a tort system will necessarily result in hospitals being faced with more unpaid bills. The answer is found to depend upon legal regulation of the medical insurance industry, the percent of drivers operating without auto insurance, the proportion of drivers who are without medical insurance and the percent of drivers who purchase Med Pay
In his Forward to this volume\u27s Tort Law - No-Fault Insurance Symposium, Mr. Sugarman briefly not...
This paper evaluates the impact of malpractice reforms on average malpractice payment awards, freque...
In many states, auto insurers rather than health insurers pay for a substantial fraction of the medi...
Do changes in the population covered by health insurance affect liability insurers, who compensate b...
In the area of medical malpractice, no-fault has been offered as a response to the criticisms levele...
NTRODUCTION: The hidden cost of defensive medicine has been cited by policymakers as a significant d...
This paper estimated the effects of tort law and insurer investment returns on physician malpractice...
Medicaid reimburses healthcare providers for services at a lower rate than any other type of insuran...
This paper is testing the hypothesis: no-fault insurance leads to an increase in car accidents becau...
The enactment of the Massachusetts compulsory no-fault insurance bill, and Senator Phillip Hart\u27s...
One of the key issues separating US critics of a no-fault alternative to the tort system for compens...
Previous literature indicates that non-economic damages caps increase the number of physicians but f...
Tort and insurance law treat driving as a centrally important activity and treat injuries caused by ...
Uninsured individuals receive fewer health care services for at least three reasons: higher prices, ...
In this Article, Professor O\u27Connell discusses the inadequacies behind auto insurance and the sys...
In his Forward to this volume\u27s Tort Law - No-Fault Insurance Symposium, Mr. Sugarman briefly not...
This paper evaluates the impact of malpractice reforms on average malpractice payment awards, freque...
In many states, auto insurers rather than health insurers pay for a substantial fraction of the medi...
Do changes in the population covered by health insurance affect liability insurers, who compensate b...
In the area of medical malpractice, no-fault has been offered as a response to the criticisms levele...
NTRODUCTION: The hidden cost of defensive medicine has been cited by policymakers as a significant d...
This paper estimated the effects of tort law and insurer investment returns on physician malpractice...
Medicaid reimburses healthcare providers for services at a lower rate than any other type of insuran...
This paper is testing the hypothesis: no-fault insurance leads to an increase in car accidents becau...
The enactment of the Massachusetts compulsory no-fault insurance bill, and Senator Phillip Hart\u27s...
One of the key issues separating US critics of a no-fault alternative to the tort system for compens...
Previous literature indicates that non-economic damages caps increase the number of physicians but f...
Tort and insurance law treat driving as a centrally important activity and treat injuries caused by ...
Uninsured individuals receive fewer health care services for at least three reasons: higher prices, ...
In this Article, Professor O\u27Connell discusses the inadequacies behind auto insurance and the sys...
In his Forward to this volume\u27s Tort Law - No-Fault Insurance Symposium, Mr. Sugarman briefly not...
This paper evaluates the impact of malpractice reforms on average malpractice payment awards, freque...
In many states, auto insurers rather than health insurers pay for a substantial fraction of the medi...