My purpose in this commentary is twofold. First, I want to offer a few thoughts on why the American medical profession sometimes has a hard time accepting law on its own terms. Second, I want to suggest that even “good law” from the perspective of the medical profession—should it overcome its habits of resistance—may still be bad health policy for the United States
This article focuses on three key reasons that the corporate practice of medicine doctrine should be...
Increasingly law has come to pervade medical practice, and increasingly doctors have come to resent ...
This commentary describes the legal challenges to the Patient Protection and Affordable Care Act
My purpose in this commentary is twofold. First, I want to offer a few thoughts on why the American ...
Physician behavior is a key target of government regulation intended to improve the efficiency, qual...
Alawyer today can hardly speak to a doctor--or even be treated by one-without being assailed by lawy...
In response to a prominent editorial by Dr. Jeffrey M. Drazen, Professor Sage explains how a relatio...
The American health care system is on a glide path toward ruin. Health spending has become the fisca...
This Foreword to a forthcoming symposium on the patchwork health care system to be published in th...
Health lawyers and policymakers cannot always see the same shadows of the laws that are visible to h...
By default, the courts are inventing health law. The law governing the American health system arises...
Calling malpractice reform a health policy problem means that we should analyze it in terms of the...
Arguments over the constitutionality of the Affordable Care Act illustrate the pervasiveness of heal...
With an expanding market for what is now known as complimentary and alternative medicine (CAM), st...
This Note identifies a discrepancy in the law governing the decisionmaking that directs patient care...
This article focuses on three key reasons that the corporate practice of medicine doctrine should be...
Increasingly law has come to pervade medical practice, and increasingly doctors have come to resent ...
This commentary describes the legal challenges to the Patient Protection and Affordable Care Act
My purpose in this commentary is twofold. First, I want to offer a few thoughts on why the American ...
Physician behavior is a key target of government regulation intended to improve the efficiency, qual...
Alawyer today can hardly speak to a doctor--or even be treated by one-without being assailed by lawy...
In response to a prominent editorial by Dr. Jeffrey M. Drazen, Professor Sage explains how a relatio...
The American health care system is on a glide path toward ruin. Health spending has become the fisca...
This Foreword to a forthcoming symposium on the patchwork health care system to be published in th...
Health lawyers and policymakers cannot always see the same shadows of the laws that are visible to h...
By default, the courts are inventing health law. The law governing the American health system arises...
Calling malpractice reform a health policy problem means that we should analyze it in terms of the...
Arguments over the constitutionality of the Affordable Care Act illustrate the pervasiveness of heal...
With an expanding market for what is now known as complimentary and alternative medicine (CAM), st...
This Note identifies a discrepancy in the law governing the decisionmaking that directs patient care...
This article focuses on three key reasons that the corporate practice of medicine doctrine should be...
Increasingly law has come to pervade medical practice, and increasingly doctors have come to resent ...
This commentary describes the legal challenges to the Patient Protection and Affordable Care Act