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Posted by J. Craig Williams: "The legal and social debate over death with dignity and assisted suicide has reignited.  Recently, the Death with Dignity bill surfaced in Massachusetts, where Representative Louis Kafka filed the bill on behalf of Al Lipkind of Stoughton, Massachusetts, who fought for legislation prior to his death after battling stomach cancer.  Please join me and my fellow co-host and attorney Bob Ambrogi as we welcome Barbara Coombs Lee, President of Compassion & Choices to look at both sides of the controversial Death with Dignity Act, assisted suicide, ethical objections and current legislation here in the States and abroad.

 

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Source: May It Please the Court, 27 Februaru 2010. © 2003 - 2010 Mayitpleasethecourt.com. Reproduced with permission of the author.

From the site: "On this edition of Ringler Radio, host Larry Cohen welcomes colleague and co-host,  Rachel D. Grant, Settlement Annuity Specialist in the Detroit office, as they look at emergency room errors, traumatic birth injuries and neurological injuries within hospitals, with Attorney Brian J. McKeen from the firm of McKeen & Associates.  They will discuss how to determine medical negligence, what is being done in hospitals to prevent ER errors and how a structured settlement can benefit clients

Podcast: Play in new window | Download (right click, save as) (Duration: 32:04 -- 29.6MB)

Related Podcasts

  • October 1, 2007 -- Michigan Trial Lawyers
  • December 21, 2005 -- Understanding the Defense
  • May 21, 2005 -- Medical Negligence

The active links are available at the source site listed below.

Source: Legal Talk Network, 20 October 2009

From the site: "When the issue of medical liability reform came up in President Obama's speech on Health Care reform in front of Congress, it was met with boos from Democrats and a standing ovation from Republicans. Co-hosts Bob Ambrogi and J. Craig Williams welcome medical malpractice reform expert,  Professor Stephan Landsman the Robert A. Clifford Chair in Tort Law and Social Policy from DePaul University College of Law and Darren McKinney Director of Communications from the American Tort Reform Association to look at both sides of medical liability reform as the debate plays out for trial attorneys and the medical profession.

 

Podcast: Play in new window | Download (Duration: 39:54 -- 30.0MB)

Related Podcasts

  • September 22, 2009 -- The Medical Profession's Relationship with the Legal Profession
  • July 22, 2009 -- The Great Debate over Health Care Reform
  • February 20, 2008 -- Obama/Clinton: The Remaining Lawyer Candidates
  • September 4, 2007 -- Issues in Medical Malpractice
  • April 18, 2007 -- Past & Future: Lawyer-Presidents" 

The active links are available at the source site listed below.

Source: Legal Talk Network, 24 September 2009

From the site: "With medical malpractice being a hot-button issue, the medical field and the legal field often times seem at odds with each other.   In this edition of Ringler Radio, host Larry Cohen welcomes Wayne M. Willoughby, partner with the firm Gershon, Willoughby, Getz & Smith, LLC in Baltimore and Dr. Zev T. Gershon, team leader at Gershon, Willoughby, Getz & Smith, to take a closer look at the relationship between the legal profession and the medical profession.  You'll also hear about the misconceptions about medical malpractice and new developments in Cerebral Palsy.

Related Podcasts

  • September 4, 2007 -- Issues in Medical Malpractice"

The active links are available at the source site listed below.

Source: Legal Talk Network, 22 September 2009

In the news: "Unlike in other practice areas, client demand in the health care arena is rising, mainly because companies want to prepare for the Obama administration's anticipated health care overhaul. As a result, firms are recruiting corporate, regulatory and transactional lawyers who have experience with health care, pharmaceutical, biotechnology and medical device industries. Attorneys have also been busy advising clients on M&A activity, as the health care industry hasn't been as affected as others by financing issues."

 

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Source: Law.Com's Daily Legal Newswire. 11 June 2009. Copyright 2008.  ALM Properties, Inc. All rights reserved. Subscribe <http://store.law.com/registration/register.asp?subscribeto=nw>

"Neuroenhancers and Lawyers"

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Posted by Simon Fodden: "The New Yorker has a fascinating piece, Brain Gain, by Margaret Talbot, that explores the various current and likely future uses of neuroenhancing drugs. Typically stimulants prescribed for such conditions as attention deficit disorder, prescription drugs such as Ritalin, Adderall, Provigil (modafinil), or piracetam are now commonly taken "off label" by people wishing to enhance their mental powers in some respect or other. It would seem that the principal effect of these drugs is an increase in the ability of the user to focus attention and to persist in a task that would otherwise be too tiresome to continue.

 

As I read the piece I wondered whether lawyers might not be drawn to these "enhancers." After all diligence, perseverance, increased short-term memory, ability to work longer hours are all characteristics that might be thought to promote success in some lawyers sometimes. Talbot herself uses a lawyer's situation as one small example of a benefit from an improvement in working memory: "Imagine a cross-examination, in which a lawyer has to keep track of the answers a witness has given, and formulate new questions based on them." Even more disturbing to me, at least, is her speculation:

If we eventually decide that neuroenhancers work, and are basically safe, will we one day enforce their use? Lawmakers might compel certain workers--emergency-room doctors, air-traffic controllers--to take them. (Indeed, the Air Force already makes modafinil available to pilots embarking on long missions.)

The article even raises the "but they'll do it in Singapore" bugbear to suggest that any resistance to widespread use in the U.S. might easily yield to offshore competition.

Far-fetched, of course, to suggest that it would be bad practice for a litigation lawyer not to take a neuroenhancer...right? But would it be -- is it -- bad practice for counsel to take one?

My own view is that the use of such "cosmetic neurology" is handy for pointing out those areas in our culture where social arrangements, and not brains, need serious rearranging. But our track record as a society shows that we've always taken the pill path, and so we almost certainly will again here, particularly under the urgings of Big Pharma. So have lawyers, firms, law societies started talking about these drugs? Should they?"

The active links are available at the source site listed below.

Source: Slaw, 27 April 2009

"MSA Update"

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From the site: "On July 1, 2009, new rules regarding Medicare Set-Asides will go into effect. Join Ringler Radio host, Larry Cohen and his colleague, Joan L. Pagnano, head of the Braintree, Massachusetts Ringler office as they welcome Peter Foley, Vice President of Claims Administration for the American Insurance Association to discuss the details of the new MSA regulations and how they will affect your practice. Don't miss this important discussion.

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Source: Legal Talk Network, 23 March 2009

This document provides recent developments related to medical malpractice insurance, which "covers doctors and other professionals in the medical field for liability claims arising from their treatment of patients." Some of the topics covered include claims and settlements, medical errors and patient safety, costs to the public, and the affordability of medical malpractice insurance. From the Insurance Information Institute.
URL: http://www.iii.org/media/hottopics/insurance/medicalmal/
LII Item: http://lii.org/cs/lii/view/item/21432

Source: LII Librarians' Index to the Internet. NEW THIS WEEK for 12 . Copyright 2006 by Librarians' Index to the Internet, LII. Subscribe <http://lii.org/search/file/mailinglist>.

From the site: "Did you ever want to know what goes on in an Independent Medical Evaluation (IME)? On this Workers' Comp Matters program, host Attorney Alan S. Pierce and Dr. David Cooper from The Knee Center, will take an in-depth look at the elements of the IME. They will discuss the Waddell signs, how long a comprehensive physical examination should take and the relevance of records from insurance companies.

 

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Source: Legal Talk Network, 4 February 2009

From the site: "You may have heard about the Gardasil vaccine for teenage girls, but you may not have heard about the serious side effects, allegedly affecting some young women. Merck, the company that manufactures the vaccine, the CDC and the FDA all say Gardasil is safe, effective, and important. Join Law.com bloggers and co-hosts, J. Craig Williams and Bob Ambrogi, who will discuss this controversy and the litigation swirling around Gardasil with experts, Attorney Tom Girardi, nationally known plaintiff lawyer from the California firm, Girardi & Keese and Erin Brockovich, (yes the real Erin Brockovich from the movie by the same name), President of Brockovich Research & Consulting. They will take a look at the side effects in some cases, Gardasil litigation and focus in on the efforts to educate young women about this controversial vaccine."

 

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The active links are available at the source site listed below.

Source: Legal Talk Network, 18 December 2008

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