Effective tort systems should enable access to compensation following medical injury. The existing Australian fault-based system presents barriers in accessing compensation in medical negligence claims, particularly in Victoria where claimants must satisfy permanent injury thresholds for pain and suffering damages. Proving negligence in fault systems can be lengthy, expensive and stressful. Litigation in fault-based systems embeds the dispute in an adversarial system, sidelining non- nancial needs of disputants such as voice or the desire for an explanation or an apology which inhibits non-adversarial justice approaches. Australian policy settings may be in uenced by international jurisdictions which operate more effective no-fault medica...
This chapter examines the framework for medical liability in New Zealand. From European settlement, ...
This article highlights that medical malpractice litigation has been the focal point of the debate o...
Examines "no-fault" systems in New Zealand, Sweden, and Denmark, in which patients injured by medica...
The deficiencies of the tort system in handling medical negligence claims have been apparent for a n...
New Zealand’s accident compensation system is ‘no-fault’, meaning that New Zealanders are compensate...
For decades in both Europe and the United states , the issue of compensation for victims f medical i...
The tort system is roundly indicted for its inadequacies in providing compensation in response to in...
This article highlights that there are many systems designed to compensate damages caused to patient...
As an alternative to the tort or fault-based system, a nofault compensation system has been viewed ...
Medical negligence disputes in Malaysia are mainly resolved through litigation by using the tort sy...
An optimal compensation system should compensate injuries when they occur, but also reduce errors an...
Medical negligence disputes in Malaysia are mainly resolved through litigation by using the tort sys...
The New Zealand accident compensation scheme makes provision for the payment of compensation to the ...
Tort-based system of compensation for injuries associated with medical error is inadequate - develop...
Despite few apparent institutional or economic barriers, the proportion of injured patients in NZ wh...
This chapter examines the framework for medical liability in New Zealand. From European settlement, ...
This article highlights that medical malpractice litigation has been the focal point of the debate o...
Examines "no-fault" systems in New Zealand, Sweden, and Denmark, in which patients injured by medica...
The deficiencies of the tort system in handling medical negligence claims have been apparent for a n...
New Zealand’s accident compensation system is ‘no-fault’, meaning that New Zealanders are compensate...
For decades in both Europe and the United states , the issue of compensation for victims f medical i...
The tort system is roundly indicted for its inadequacies in providing compensation in response to in...
This article highlights that there are many systems designed to compensate damages caused to patient...
As an alternative to the tort or fault-based system, a nofault compensation system has been viewed ...
Medical negligence disputes in Malaysia are mainly resolved through litigation by using the tort sy...
An optimal compensation system should compensate injuries when they occur, but also reduce errors an...
Medical negligence disputes in Malaysia are mainly resolved through litigation by using the tort sys...
The New Zealand accident compensation scheme makes provision for the payment of compensation to the ...
Tort-based system of compensation for injuries associated with medical error is inadequate - develop...
Despite few apparent institutional or economic barriers, the proportion of injured patients in NZ wh...
This chapter examines the framework for medical liability in New Zealand. From European settlement, ...
This article highlights that medical malpractice litigation has been the focal point of the debate o...
Examines "no-fault" systems in New Zealand, Sweden, and Denmark, in which patients injured by medica...