Are health maintenance organization (HMO) physicians obligated to act exclusively in the interest of the individual patient? Does the mere existence of financial incentives to limit patient care violate this obligation? To what extent are doctors responsible for the population of patients served by a health plan, or for promoting a fair distribution of health care among society as a whole? These questions come to the fore in the recent U.S. Supreme Court case, Pegram v. Herdrich. In Pegram, Herdrich claimed that the terms of the Carle HMO organization, rewarding its physician owners for limiting medical care, entailed an inherent or anticipatory breach of the physician\u27s fiduciary duty under ERISA. Specifically, the terms of the HMO crea...
This Article explores the implications for medical care of a debate that is more familiar in the law...
Over the last decade managed care has become the dominant form of health care delivery, because it h...
States may have more freedom to regulate the practices of managed-care organizations than many obser...
Are health maintenance organization (HMO) physicians obligated to act exclusively in the interest of...
Accordingly, this Article is a rebuttal to the Supreme Court\u27s opinion in Pegram v. Herdrich on t...
On June 12, 2000, in a unanimous opinion written by Justice Souter, the U.S. Supreme Court, reversin...
530 U.S. 211 (2000) On June 12, 2000, the U.S. Supreme Court, in a unanimous decision written by Jus...
Although scholars and policymakers increasingly accept the need to ration health care, physicians do...
On June 12, 2000, a unanimous Supreme Court held that treatment decisions made by an HMO, acting thr...
This Article advocates disclosure as a compromise between wholeheartedly embracing financial incenti...
Despite the emergence of managed health care and the resulting dramatic change in the role of the th...
This Article critically examines calls by scholars, legislators, and regulators advocating the impos...
ERISA, adopted a quarter century ago to reform private pension law, imposed by the end of the twenti...
This paper looks at the ethical problems posed by managed care (in particular, at its incentives to ...
Health maintenance organizations (HMOs) use financial incentives to influence physicians ' clin...
This Article explores the implications for medical care of a debate that is more familiar in the law...
Over the last decade managed care has become the dominant form of health care delivery, because it h...
States may have more freedom to regulate the practices of managed-care organizations than many obser...
Are health maintenance organization (HMO) physicians obligated to act exclusively in the interest of...
Accordingly, this Article is a rebuttal to the Supreme Court\u27s opinion in Pegram v. Herdrich on t...
On June 12, 2000, in a unanimous opinion written by Justice Souter, the U.S. Supreme Court, reversin...
530 U.S. 211 (2000) On June 12, 2000, the U.S. Supreme Court, in a unanimous decision written by Jus...
Although scholars and policymakers increasingly accept the need to ration health care, physicians do...
On June 12, 2000, a unanimous Supreme Court held that treatment decisions made by an HMO, acting thr...
This Article advocates disclosure as a compromise between wholeheartedly embracing financial incenti...
Despite the emergence of managed health care and the resulting dramatic change in the role of the th...
This Article critically examines calls by scholars, legislators, and regulators advocating the impos...
ERISA, adopted a quarter century ago to reform private pension law, imposed by the end of the twenti...
This paper looks at the ethical problems posed by managed care (in particular, at its incentives to ...
Health maintenance organizations (HMOs) use financial incentives to influence physicians ' clin...
This Article explores the implications for medical care of a debate that is more familiar in the law...
Over the last decade managed care has become the dominant form of health care delivery, because it h...
States may have more freedom to regulate the practices of managed-care organizations than many obser...