- Kansas Attorney General Six Served Subpoenas In Tiller Case
Kansas Attorney General Stephen Six (D) said Wednesday that his office was served with two subpoenas from a Sedgwick County, Kan., grand jury investigating abortion provider George Tiller, owner of Women's Health Care Services, the AP/Kansas City Star reports. Six said the office received the subpoenas Tuesday. - Franecke Law Group Begins Opening Arguments Tomorrow In a Jury Trial Which Will Determine if Toyot
A San Joaquin County jury is expected to hear opening arguments tomorrow by attorneys representing the Franecke Law Group in a lawsuit (Singh v. Toyota Motor Corporation, Case CV023159) that alleges that Toyota Motor Corporation failed to test the design for the Toyota Corolla ...... - Supreme Court Justice Ginsburg Says She Does Not Believe Roe V. Wade Will Be Overturned
Supreme Court Justice Ruth Bader Ginsburg on Sunday during a speech at Ahavath Achim synagogue in Atlanta said that she does not believe the court will overturn Roe v. Wade, the 1973 Supreme Court decision that effectively barred state abortion bans, the Atlanta Journal-Constitution reports (Visser, Atlanta Journal-Constitution, 10/21). - Kentucky Officials Sue OxyContin Manufacturer Due To Extensive Abuse In Appalachia
It is known by some as "hillbilly heroin" - OxyContin (oxycodone) abuse has become so extensive in Appalachia that Kentucky officials have sued Purdue Pharma, the manufacturers of the prescription painkiller. - Birch, Stewart, Kolasch & Birch, LLP Advanced Patent and Licensing Seminar to Be Held September
Birch, Stewart, Kolasch & Birch, a leading international intellectual property law firm, has announced final registration for its 13th Annual Advanced Patent and Licensing Seminar to be held September 10 – 21 in the firm’s East Coast Office located in Falls Church, Virginia. - Medical Liability Reform Requires National Action, USA
The costs of medical litigation per person in the United States are far higher than in any other major industrialized nation in the world. - Court Rules HHS Must Release Medicare Physician Claims Data
The U.S. District Court for the District of Columbia has ruled that HHS must release Medicare physician claims data for Illinois, Maryland, Virginia, Washington state and Washington, D.C................. - USA Today Op-Eds Assess Recent Court Decision On Experimental Medication For Terminally Ill Patients
USA Today on Tuesday published an editorial and an opinion piece addressing a decision last week by the U.S. Court of Appeals for the District of Columbia Circuit................ - HHS Charges South Florida Company With Medicare Fraud
As part of a joint effort to combat illegal Medicare activity, HHS and the Department of Justice on Monday............... - 'Real Drama' In Release Of Medical Workers Is Changing Libyan Regime, Opinion Piece Says
The "real drama" in the release of five Bulgarian nurses and a Palestinian doctor who were imprisoned for more than eight years............ - Democrats Launch Ad Campaign Urging Republicans To Support SCHIP Expansion
The Democratic Congressional Campaign Committee on Monday launched a radio advertisement and automated telephone campaign in the districts of five Republican House members to criticize their votes against legislation that would expand SCHIP, the Washington Times reports. - Group Drops Lawsuit Over Aetna Limited-Benefit Health Plans
Consumer advocacy group Citizens for Economic Opportunity on Thursday dropped a lawsuit filed against Aetna over allegations that the company marketed limited-benefit health plans............. - Nurse Cautioned For Taunting Patient, UK
A nurse has received a caution for five years after being found guilty of taunting a chronically mentally ill patient in her care. - Nurse Struck Off For Stealing Drugs From Hospital, UK
A nurse from Wales, Nelson Casuga has been struck off after being convicted of the theft of the drugs Midazolam and Ketamine for his own use. - Nurse Cautioned For Taunting Patient, UK
A nurse has received a caution for five years after being found guilty of taunting a chronically mentally ill patient in her care. - Palestinian Doctor Imprisoned For Allegedly Intentionally Infecting Libyan Children With HIV
Palestinian doctor Ashraf Alhajouj, who was imprisoned for more than eight years in Libya for allegedly intentionally infecting hundreds of Libyan children with HIV............. - Sex Drugs Seized By Medicines Regulator, UK
Enforcement officers from the Medicines and Healthcare products Regulatory Agency (MHRA) seized approximately £350,000 worth of unlicensed medicines on 01 August 2007 at a secure lock-up facility in Uxbridge, West London. - California Supreme Court To Hear Case Involving Physicians Who Refused To Perform IVF
The California Supreme Court is scheduled to hear a case involving two physicians who refused to perform in vitro fertilization for a woman because of their religious beliefs, USA Today reports. - Federal Judge Allows Class-Action Gender, Pregnancy Discrimination Lawsuit Against Novartis
U.S. District Court Judge Gerard Lynch ruled that 19 current and former female employees of the pharmaceutical company............. - New York Times Magazine Examines Increase In Maternal, Family Care Workplace Discrimination
There has been a "flood" of workplace discrimination lawsuits filed since the mid-1990s because of "family care-giving obligations," including pregnancy and maternal care, the New York Times Magazine reports. - Chinese Court Sentences Two Men Linked To Clashes In Southwest China Over One-Child Policy To Prison
The Bobai county court in China's southwest Guangxi province sentenced two men to prison who were linked to recent violent clashes between local police and residents over a campaign to enforce penalties............... - Medical Workers Sentenced To Death In HIV Infection Case Arrive In Bulgaria
Six medical workers who were imprisoned for more than eight years in Libya for allegedly intentionally infecting hundreds of Libyan children with HIV on Tuesday were pardoned by Bulgarian President Georgi Parvanov after arriving in the country, the AP/Boston Herald reports (AP/Boston Herald, 7/24). - Kansas AG Morrison Files Motion To Intervene In Legal Dispute Between Planned Parenthood Affiliate
Kansas Attorney General Paul Morrison (D) on Wednesday filed a motion to intervene in the legal dispute between Planned Parenthood of Kansas............ - Libya Frees Six Bulgarian Medics
The six Bulgarian medics, five nurses and a Palestinian doctor who was naturalized Bulgarian recently................ - Pennsylvania Insurance Department Decides Not To Increase Medical Malpractice Limits
Deputy Insurance Commissioner Randy Rohrbaugh today said he has determined that there is not evidence............... - Overcharging Tens of Thousands of Uninsured Patients to Advance as a Class Action
Kelly M. Dermody of Lieff Cabraser Heimann & Bernstein, LLP, announced that San Diego County Superior Court Judge................ - Department Of Consumer Protection Arrests Physician For Illegal Prescribing Of Controlled Substances
An investigation by Department of Consumer Protection Drug Control agents, the Chief State's Attorney Office............ - Department Of Consumer Protection Arrests Physician For Illegal Prescribing Of Controlled Substances
An investigation by Department of Consumer Protection Drug Control agents, the Chief State's Attorney Office, the federal Drug Enforcement Administration................ - HHS Fights Home Health Agency Fraud, USA
HHS Secretary Michael Leavitt announced an initiative designed to protect Medicare beneficiaries from fraudulent Home Health Agency (HHA) providers. - HHS Fights Home Health Agency Fraud, USA
HHS Secretary Michael Leavitt announced an initiative designed to protect Medicare beneficiaries from fraudulent Home Health Agency (HHA) providers. - Nurse Struck Off For Child Pornography Charges
A nurse has been struck off the register following a conviction for having pornographic images of children on his work laptop. - Fight Against Frivolous Medical Malpractice Suits Needed, Op-Ed Says
"Though the medical tort system is designed to deter unsafe practices and to make negligently injured patients whole, it does neither. - Northern Ireland Nurse Struck Off For Misconduct
A nurse has been struck off the register for misconduct over a series of charges, including handing the wrong instruments to surgeons and injuring a patient by administering incorrect medicines. - Mississippi Supreme Court Rejects Case Challenging Constitutionality Of State's Parental Consent Law
The Mississippi Supreme Court on Thursday declined to hear an appeal of a case that challenges whether the state's parental consent law for abortion can be used as a defense in a criminal case, the AP/Jackson Clarion-Ledger reports. - Omnicare Takes Legal Action Against Health Insurers, PBMs
Omnicare, a Kentucky-based prescription drug and medical services supplier for nursing homes . . . . . . . . - HHS Launches Pilot Program To Identify Medicare Billing Fraud For Medical Equipment
HHS on Monday announced a pilot program targeting fraudulent Medicare billings submitted by medical equipment providers in the Los Angeles area and South Florida, the Los Angeles Times reports. - New Jersey Judge Rules Federal Law Does Not Bar Lawsuits Alleging Wyeth Did Not Warn
New Jersey Superior Court Judge Bryan Garruto on Wednesday ruled a federal law giving FDA the exclusive right to determine . . . . . . . . - Is A Malpractice Crisis Looming For Pediatricians? Indiana University Study
Researchers from the Indiana University School of Medicine, in the first systematic multi-year analysis of malpractice claims exclusively against pediatricians . . . . . . . . - Is A Malpractice Crisis Looming For Pediatricians? Indiana University Study
Researchers from the Indiana University School of Medicine, in the first systematic multi-year analysis of malpractice claims exclusively against pediatricians . . . . . . . . - Shelhigh Enters Consent Order With FDA - Agrees To Halt Distribution Until Manufacturing
Under a court order signed few days ago, Shelhigh, Inc., of Union, N.J., agreed to stop distributing its implantable medical devices . . . . . . . . - Pennsylvania Patient Safety Authority Releases Wrong-Site Surgery Data
Wrong-site surgery data received by the Patient Safety Authority shows that every other day in Pennsylvania healthcare facilities an actual adverse event or near miss of a wrong-site surgery occurs. - U.S. Supreme Court Refuses Case Alleging AstraZeneca, Barr Conspired To Monopolize Market
The U.S. Supreme Court on Monday refused to consider a case alleging that AstraZeneca and Barr Laboratories conspired to delay marketing of tamoxifen so as to maintain a monopoly for Nolvadex, AstraZeneca's brand name version of the drug, Dow Jones reports (Anderson, Dow Jones, 6/25). - Lack Of Agreement Over Compensation Package Stalling Deal On Libyan HIV Infection Case
The families of HIV-positive children in Libya on Friday announced that a lack of agreement over a compensation package has stalled an agreement that could lead to the release of six medical workers who were sentenced to death for allegedly intentionally infecting the children with HIV, AFP/EU Business reports (AFP/EU Business, 6/22). - Federal Judge Rules Three Pharmaceutical Companies Engage In Unfair Practices For Medication Prices
U.S. District Judge Patti Saris in Boston on Thursday ruled that AstraZeneca, Schering-Plough and Bristol-Myers Squibb engaged in unfair and deceptive trade practices related to the prices of some their medications, Dow Jones/Boston Globe reports (Dow Jones/Boston Globe, 6/22). - Texas Sues Three Drug Makers Alleging Medicaid Fraud
Texas on Wednesday filed lawsuits against Mylan Laboratories, Sandoz, Teva Pharmaceuticals . . . . . . . . - Philippine Supreme Court Hears Arguments In Case Involving New Rules That Extend Ban On Ads
The Philippine Supreme Court on Tuesday heard arguments in a case challenging new rules that extend the country's ban on advertisements for infant formula that include a prohibition on ads for children ages two and younger, the AP/Boston Globe reports. - Philippine Supreme Court Hears Arguments In Case Involving New Rules That Extend Ban On Ads
The Philippine Supreme Court on Tuesday heard arguments in a case challenging new rules that extend the country's ban on advertisements for infant formula that include a prohibition on ads for children ages two and younger, the AP/Boston Globe reports. - Philippine Supreme Court Hears Arguments In Case Involving New Rules That Extend Ban On Ads
The Philippine Supreme Court on Tuesday heard arguments in a case challenging new rules that extend the country's ban on advertisements for infant formula that include a prohibition on ads for children ages two and younger, the AP/Boston Globe reports. - Abbott Sues French HIV/AIDS Advocacy Group For Launching Attack On Company's Web Site
Abbott Laboratories on May 23 filed a lawsuit in French criminal court against the HIV/AIDS advocacy group Act Up-Paris for launching a "cyber attack" on the company's Web site, the Wall Street Journal reports. - Supreme Court Decision On Home Health Care Workers 'Makes No Sense,' Editorial States
The recent U.S. Supreme Court decision that federal minimum wage and overtime laws do not apply to home care workers "makes no sense for a nation of aging baby boomers," a Philadelphia Inquirer editorial states. - AIDS Healthcare Foundation Plans To Sue Florida Health Regulators Over Change In Medicaid Provider
The AIDS Healthcare Foundation is planning to file suit this week in Jacksonville, Fla., over a state plan that changes the provider of HIV/AIDS care for Medicaid beneficiaries in the state, Tom Myers, the organization's general counsel, said recently . . . . . . . - Warner Chilcott To Pay $5.5M To Settle Suit Alleging Company Kept Generic Contraceptive
Warner Chilcott will pay $5.5 million to settle a lawsuit that alleges the company conspired with Barr Pharmaceuticals to block a generic form of Warner's oral contraceptive Ovcon from entering the market . . . . . . . . . - Gingrey Introduces Medical Liability Reform Legislation - Bipartisan Bill Will Ensure Physicians
U.S. Congressman Phil Gingrey, M.D. (R-GA) today introduced the Help Efficient, Accessible, Low-cost, Timely Healthcare (HEALTH) Act . . . . . . . . . - Maine Supreme Court Upholds Dirigo Health Funding Mechanism
The Maine Supreme Court on Thursday ruled 5-1 to uphold a "key funding mechanism" in Gov. John Baldacci's (D) Dirigo Health initiative . . . . . . . . - FTC Calls On Supreme Court To Consider Exclusion Agreements
The Washington Post on Monday examined how "an intragovernmental dispute" between the Federal Trade Commission . . . . . . . . - Much Higher Value Put On Loss Of Loved Ones By Economists Than Courts
Researchers at the University of Warwick and the University of London's Institute of Education have produced new research that shows the UK court system . . . . . . . . . - Caps On Medical Malpractice Damages Cut Doctors' Insurance Costs
Caps on medical malpractice damages mean lower insurance premiums for doctors, according to a new review from two Alabama universities. - Court Case Over Frozen Embryos In Texas Could Have Implications For Roe V. Wade
A case before the Texas Supreme Court over what should happen with three frozen embryos could have implications for Roe v. Wade -- the 1973 Supreme Court case that effectively barred state abortion bans -- the Los Angeles Times reports. - FDA Takes Action To Stop Marketing Of Unapproved Timed-Release Guaifenesin Drug Products
The U.S. Food and Drug Administration (FDA) today announced its intention to take action against companies that market unapproved drug products in timed-release dosage form that contain guaifenesin . . . . . . . . - Essential Tones Of Music Rooted In Human Speech
A Libyan court on Sunday acquitted of slander charges five Bulgarian nurses and one Palestinian doctor sentenced to death for allegedly intentionally infecting hundreds of Libyan children with HIV, the New York Times reports (Brunwasser, New York Times, 5/28). - New York Gov. Spitzer, Lawmakers Lobbying For Bill To Require HIV Testing For Indicted Rape Suspects
New York Gov. Eliot Spitzer (D) and some state lawmakers are lobbying for a measure that would require suspects indicted for rape to be tested for HIV, the New York Times reports. - New Scam Targeting Military Spouses, Warns American Red Cross
The American Red Cross has learned about a new scam targeting military families. - Court Of Appeals For Veterans Claims Faces Increased Backlog, Judge Testifies
A federal appeals court judge on Tuesday before the House Veterans' Affairs Subcommittee on Disability Assistance . . . . . . . . . . - EPA Cites USA's Largest Hospital Disinfectant Manufacturer For False Claims
The largest U.S. manufacturer of hospital disinfectants has been charged with making false claims about the effectiveness of its products against microbial pests . . . . . . . . - N.Y. Attorney General Subpoenas Amgen Data On Marketing Practices
Biotechnology company Amgen in a Securities and Exchange Commission filing on Tuesday said that it has received a subpoena from the New York state attorney general . . . . . . . - MSF Reacts To Charges Issued Against Palestinian Staff Member
On May 17, Mr. Mossaab Bashir, a member of the staff of Doctors Without Borders/Médecins Sans Frontières (MSF) in the Gaza Strip . . . . . . . . - Strike Force Formed To Target Fraudulent Billing Of Medicare Program By Health Care Companies
Thirty-eight people have been arrested in the first phase of a targeted criminal . . . . . . . . - Blue Cross Reaches Deal In Lawsuit Over Policy Cancellations
Blue Cross of California on Friday agreed to stop canceling individual health coverage unless it can prove that policyholders "intentionally misrepresented" their medical histories on applications for coverage . . . . . . . . . - Prison Sentence For Illegal Drugs Advertising, UK
A Manchester man, Martin Simon Hickman of Ashton Under-Lyne was sentenced at the High Court of Justice for 3 months yesterday for contempt of court. - Kaiser Daily Health Policy Report Highlights Medical Malpractice Developments
Summaries of recent news coverage about medical malpractice in Nebraska, Nevada, Ohio, Oklahoma and Pennsylvania appear below. - New York Mesothelioma Attorneys File Lawsuit in Syracuse, NY After Rare Asbestos-Related Cancer
Independent studies confirm at least 15 asbestos-related cancer deaths among New York State talc workers, according to attorney who filed the mesothelioma lawsuit. - Organon Starts Legal Proceedings In Portugal In Defence Of Livial
Organon will today open legal proceedings against the suppliers of two drugs for infringement of its chemical purity and particle size patents for tibolone. - Weitz & Luxenberg Responds to Report Citing Rise of Hospital Errors
A new report on American hospitals concluded that the death of nearly 250,000 Medicare patients might have been prevented if healthcare workers made fewer errors. - Court Postpones Slander Hearing For Medical Workers Sentenced To Death In Libyan HIV Infection Case
Libyan Judge Salem Hamrouni on Sunday postponed until April 29 a hearing in the slander trial brought against six medical workers sentenced to death for allegedly intentionally infecting hundreds of Libyan children with HIV, AFP/Independent Online reports. - Juries More Likely To Favor Defendants In Malpractice Lawsuits, Study Finds
Juries are more likely to favor defendants in medical malpractice lawsuits, in part because they have more resources than plaintiffs . . . . . . . - Did Drug Reps Encourage Doctors To Prescribe Gabapentin For Non-approved Uses?
A new study published in PLoS Medicine suggests that so-called "detail" visits to doctors made by drug company representatives can involve promotion of drugs for non-approved, "off-label" uses. - Advocate Protesting China's One-Child Policy Loses Appeal To Two-and-a-Half-Year Prison Sentence
Human rights advocate Mao Hengfeng, who has protested for the past 19 years against China's one-child-per-family policy . . . . . . . - Malpractice Study -- Juries Sympathize More With Doctors
There's a common belief that juries frequently side with patients in lawsuits involving medical malpractice. - Several States Consider Legislation That Would Make Physician Apologies Inadmissible As Evidence
Lawmakers in nine states are considering bills that would allow physicians to apologize to their patients or patients' families for medical errors without having their apologies be used in court as an admission of guilt, the AP/Houston Chronicle reports. - HIPAA Allows Police Access To Alleged Crime Victims In Hospitals
The Health Insurance Portability and Accountability Act allows hospitals to provide police with access to patients who are victims of alleged crimes, U.S. District Judge Tucker Melancon ruled on Friday, the AP/Dayton Daily News reports (AP/Dayton Daily News, 4/3). - Texas Officials Reach Settlement In Medicaid Lawsuit; Funding Increase Proposed
Texas state House Speaker Tom Craddick (R) and Lt. Gov. David Dewhurst (R) on Thursday announced a settlement with plaintiff's attorneys in a class-action lawsuit involving Medicaid benefits for children, the Austin American-Statesman reports. - GMC Investigates Causes Of Prescribing Errors, UK
The GMC (General Medical Council) has announced funding for a £100,000 research project that aims to investigate the prevalence and causes of errors in doctors' prescribing. - GMC Investigates Causes Of Prescribing Errors, UK
The GMC (General Medical Council) has announced funding for a £100,000 research project that aims to investigate the prevalence and causes of errors in doctors' prescribing. - Physician Entrepreneur Celebrates Five Years Of Protecting Good Doctors Against Bad Lawyers
This April, entrepreneur, neurosurgeon Jeffery Segal, MD, FACS, and founder of Medical Justice Services, celebrates five years of relentlessly and successfully defending physicians against frivolous medical malpractice lawsuits - a defense that often includes taking the first punch. - RAND Study Finds Mental Health Courts Have The Potential To Save Taxpayers Money
Special courts that sentence people with mental illness who are convicted of misdemeanors and low-level felonies to treatment instead of jail have the potential to save taxpayers money, according to a RAND Corporation study conducted for the Council of State Governments Justice Center. - Court To Hear Appeal In Lawsuit On Experimental Prescription Drug Access
The U.S. Court of Appeals for the District of Columbia on Thursday will reconsider a lawsuit against FDA that seeks to provide terminally ill patients with expanded access to experimental medications, the Baltimore Sun reports (Rockoff, Baltimore Sun, 3/1). - Federal Appeals Court Rules In Favor Of U.S. Policy Requiring Groups That Receive HIV/AIDS
The U.S. Court of Appeals for the District of Columbia on Tuesday ruled that a U.S. policy requiring recipients of federal HIV/AIDS service grants to pledge to oppose commercial sex work does not violate the groups' First Amendment right to free speech, the AP/International Herald Tribune reports (Jakes Jordan, AP/International Herald Tribune, 2/27). - New York Times Profiles Chinese Lawyers' Involvement In Court Case Of Advocate
The New York Times on Sunday profiled Chinese public defense lawyers Li Jinsong and Li Jianqiang, who have differed on how to approach cases such as the defense of human rights advocate Chen Guangcheng (Kahn, New York Times, 2/25). - Advocacy Group Sues Federal Agencies Over Statements About Medical Marijuana
The Oakland, Calif.-based advocacy group Americans for Safe Access on Wednesday filed suit in Oakland federal court against HHS and FDA over statements the organizations have made about medical marijuana . . . . . . - India concerned at new British law affecting Indian medics: Ravi
India is "very concerned" over a new British immigration law that has affected job prospects of thousands of Indian doctors in Britain and will take up the issue at the diplomatic level, said Minister for Overseas Indian Affairs Vayalar Ravi Sunday. - Indian Court Hears Arguments In Case Against Country's Patents Act
A court in Chennai, India, on Thursday heard arguments from pharmaceutical company Novartis in a case challenging a section of India's Patents Act that aims to restrict certain kinds of patents . . . . . . - Kansas Supreme Court Dismisses Charges Filed Against Physician Tiller
The Kansas Supreme Court on Tuesday ruled against reinstating criminal charges filed last month by former state Attorney General Phill Kline (R) against physician George Tiller for allegedly performing illegal late-term abortions on women . . . . . - Slander Hearing Against Bulgarian Nurses Sentenced To Death In HIV Infection Case Postponed
A hearing in the slander trial brought against five Bulgarian nurses sentenced to death for allegedly intentionally infecting hundreds of Libyan children with HIV has been postponed until later this month, the nurses' lawyer said on Sunday, Reuters UK reports (Reuters UK, 2/11). - Lawsuit Might Reduce FDA Authority In Allowing Terminally Ill Patients To Use Experimental
The U.S. Court of Appeals for the District of Columbia on March 1 will reconsider a case that "threatens to shake the foundations of the FDA's regulatory authority covering pharmaceuticals and lead to greatly expanded use" of experimental medications, the Newark Star-Ledger reports (Cohen, Newark Star-Ledger, 2/12). - Louisiana Supreme Court Vacates Decision On State Cap In Medical Malpractice Lawsuits
The Louisiana Supreme Court on Friday vacated a decision by the state 3rd Circuit Court of Appeals that declared a $500,000 state cap on damages in medical malpractice lawsuits unconstitutional, the Baton Rouge Advocate reports (Griggs, Baton Rouge Advocate, 2/8). - President Bush Renews Call For Tort Reform, Says 'Frivolous' Medical Malpractice Lawsuits
President Bush has renewed his call for nationwide tort reform, but federal legislation addressing medical malpractice lawsuits is unlikely to pass while Democrats hold the majority in Congress . . . . . - Mezey -v- South West London & St. George's Mental Health NHS Trust, UK
In an important decision today the Court of Appeal refused South West London & St. George's Mental Health NHS Trust permission to appeal against an earlier decision made by Mr. Justice Underhill. - Govt to set up DNA bank to enforce law
US authorities will soon begin collecting DNA samples from suspects arrested or detained by federal authorities, including hundreds of thousands of illegal immigrants, the New York Times reported on Monday. - U.S. Set to Expand DNA Sampling
The U.S. Justice Department is completing rules to allow the collection of DNA from most people arrested or detained by federal authorities, a vast expansion of DNA gathering that will include hundreds of thousands of illegal immigrants, by far the largest group affected, U.S. media reported on Monday. - American Medical Association Adjusts Strategy On Lobbying For Medical Malpractice Legislation
Physician lobbyists are redirecting their focus on medical malpractice legislation this year as they face a new Democratic Congress . . . . . . . .
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