From Book News, Inc.
A panel of physicians, attorneys, academics, researchers, and insurance industry experts answer questions about the medical malpractice litigation crisis--such as what caused it, what reforms might alleviate it, what doctors can do to prevent lawsuits, what they should do if they're sued, and what the alternatives are to the current system. Special consideration is given to breast cancer and Pap smear litigation, risk management for the family physician, and the importance of effective communication with patients. Of interest to physicians and surgeons, health care policy makers, medical malpractice lawyers, and insurers.Copyright © 2004 Book News, Inc., Portland, OR
Medical Malpractice: A Physician's Sourcebook FROM THE PUBLISHER
What is behind the medical malpractice crisis? What legal reforms would alleviate the crisis? What can you do to prevent litigation? What do you do when you have been sued? Are there alternatives to the current system? How does the medical malpractice insurance industry function? In Medical Malpractice: A Physician's Sourcebook, a panel of physicians, attorneys, academics, researchers, and insurance industry experts consider these and other questions about the origin, nature, and ramifications of the medical malpractice litigation crisis, as well as possible solutions and alternatives to the current system. The authors focus on the clinical face of litigation from the perspective of the practicing physician in a variety of specialties, ranging from family and emergency medicine to anesthesiology, obstetrics, gynecology, and plastic surgery. Special consideration is given to breast cancer and Pap smear litigation, risk management for the family physician, and the importance of effective patient communication. Additional legal chapters examine the litigation process itself, offering insight into winning medical malpractice lawsuits, the role of the physician as expert witness or defendant, the process of discovery and deposition, and how a plaintiff's attorney views risk reduction. Public policy experts argue the case for legal reform, suggest changes in medical-legal jurisprudence that can be of immediate benefit, and reflect on the broader problems of our entire health care system and its interface with law and social policy.
Authoritative and wide-ranging, Medical Malpractice: A Physician's Sourcebook gets to the heart of issues facing physicians and surgeons today. It focuses on the practical aspects of medical malpractice lawsuits, and prepares physicians and surgeons to participate in the public policy debate by addressing current topics that will help them understand the crisis, the threat to healthcare access, and the possibilities for legal reform.
SYNOPSIS
A panel of physicians, attorneys, academics, researchers, and insurance industry experts answer questions about the medical malpractice litigation crisissuch as what caused it, what reforms might alleviate it, what doctors can do to prevent lawsuits, what they should do if they're sued, and what the alternatives are to the current system. Special consideration is given to breast cancer and Pap smear litigation, risk management for the family physician, and the importance of effective communication with patients. Of interest to physicians and surgeons, health care policy makers, medical malpractice lawyers, and insurers. Annotation ©2004 Book News, Inc., Portland, OR