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Features

MedBytes

ALM Staff & Law Journal Newsletters

For those attorneys who loved "Gilly's" in law school, Current Medical Diagnosis and Treatment (CMDT), by Lange, McGraw-Hill, will simplify your ability to understand medicine. The following is a review of the CMDT by regular contributor Elliott B. Oppenheim, MD/JD/LLM Health Law.

Can Med-Mal Caps Be Bypassed?

Janice G. Inman

As more and more states across the nation impose statutory caps on damages for non-economic injuries in medical malpractice cases, plaintiffs and their attorneys are seeing their options for compensation diminished. Attorneys are looking for ways to best help their injured clients, such as hurriedly filing claims before the imposition date of statutory caps and framing their cases as something other than medical malpractice.

Features

Liability Widens for Fetal Death Caused by Doctors

John Caher

Overturning a 19-year-old precedent, the Court of Appeals of New York held on April 1 that a woman may recover damages for emotional distress for medical malpractice that causes a miscarriage or stillbirth, even if she personally suffers no physical injury.

Features

Verdicts

ALM Staff & Law Journal Newsletters

Recent rulings of importance to you and your practice.

Med Mal News

ALM Staff & Law Journal Newsletters

National news of interest to you and your practice.

Features

Multi-Million Dollar Verdicts: Time for a Second Opinion

Michael D. Brophy

Few health-care providers confronting the reality of trial proceedings in cases involving serious injury or death fail to recognize the possibility of a multi-million dollar verdict being returned in favor of the plaintiff. In 2003, 15 of the top 100 verdicts reported nationwide by Verdictsearch resulted from medical malpractice actions, with the range falling between an award of approximately $19,465,000 to an incredible $112 million in a case involving the alleged failure to diagnose an aneurysm, which led to the patient's quadriplegia and significant brain damage.

Features

Malpractice Award Can Affect Alimony

ALM Staff & Law Journal Newsletters

A New Jersey Superior Court Judge has found that money received by a wife in a legal malpractice settlement stemming from the divorce trial can be used to reduce or eliminate alimony. Moreover, a supported spouse could not pay an excessive amount for a new home and then complain she does not have enough money for savings.

Lesbian Adoption Allowed in New York

ALM Staff & Law Journal Newsletters

In a case of first impression, a split New York State appellate court reversed a family court's order dismissing the adoption petition filed by a lesbian couple, and approved the adoption of a 5-year-old Cambodian girl. <i>Matter of Adoption of Carolyn B.</i>, CAF 03-01032, Appellate Division, 4th Department, March 24, 2004.

Life Insurance and Divorce

Martin M. Shenkman & Richard M. Weber

Life Insurance is an important matter in most divorces. There are a host of issues that are not addressed in the typical negotiation. Consider the following sample insurance clause from a Property Settlement Agreement (PSA): <i>The husband shall maintain life insurance for the wife having an aggregate death benefit of $250,000. Said obligation shall be terminated if the husband's obligation to pay alimony is modified/terminated. The husband shall maintain life insurance having an aggregate death benefit of $250,000 for the benefit of the unemancipated children. Said benefit shall be reduced by $75,000 upon the emancipation of the first child and again upon the emancipation of the second child. The obligation to maintain any life insurance for the children shall terminate upon the emancipation of all Three (3) children.</i>

Litigation

ALM Staff & Law Journal Newsletters

Recent rulings of importance to you and your practice.

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