By Brian Lee | December 14, 2023
An attorney for a New York consumer-protection advocacy coalition asked lawmakers to advance a fifth proposal, the Consumer and Small Business Protection Act, which didn't make it out of committee.
New York Law Journal | Analysis
By Karen Hoffman Lent and Kenneth Schwartz | December 11, 2023
Antitrust developments in the health care and pharmaceutical industries were exceptionally active in 2023. From the FTC's challenge of a merger between Amgen and Horizon Therapeutics, to joint agency withdrawal of well-established health care merger policy statements, to agency interest in pharmacy benefit managers, the authors review some of the most notable antitrust activity in the health care and pharmaceutical industries over the past year.
By Alaina Lancaster | Zack Needles | December 9, 2023
In this episode, Law.com Litigation Reporter Aleeza Furman talks with Temple University Health Network General Counsel John Ryan about how, in the wake of an eight-figure verdict, his legal department decided to revamp its approach to litigation.
New York Law Journal | Expert Opinion
By Steve Cohen | December 8, 2023
A discussion of a health insurer's ability to overrule a doctor's prescription/plan via the "prior authorization" process, and whether or not this triggers the most fundamental concept in torts: the duty of care.
New York Law Journal | Analysis
By Ellen Brickman and Chad Lackey | December 8, 2023
In February 2023, the DOAR Research Center sought to shed light on changing attitudes toward the pharmaceutical industry by conducting a survey, which questioned respondents on their opinions of the pharmaceutical industry and their COVID-19 experiences. This article highlights the results of the survey.
By Brian Lee | December 7, 2023
Although the hospital no longer exists, Greenberg said his attorneys will pursue the award from the Cohoes Memorial Hospital Foundation sole asset, the property on which the hospital sat.
By Brian Lee | December 4, 2023
Rubinowitz represented a client who suffered irreversible brain damage as a result of what he said was a hospital's delay in diagnosing a basilar artery stroke.
New York Law Journal | Analysis
By Thomas A. Moore and Matthew Gaier | December 4, 2023
When notice of a medical malpractice claim is not filed timely and the statute of limitations to bring a motion for permission to serve a late notice of claim expires, a court is not required to grant relief. The only avenue for a claimant who failed to file timely may be to argue the municipal defendant should be equitably estopped from seeking dismissal. The application of this doctrine to notices of claim and municipal hospitals is the subject of this article.
By Chris O'Malley | November 30, 2023
Michael Colosi is departing the company as it dramatically retools itself, in part by purchasing a telehealth service that can prescribe Ozempic.
By Emily Saul | November 17, 2023
Dr. Benjamin Neel was removed as director of NYU Langone's Laura and Isaac Perlmutter Cancer Center after he re-posted comments on social media, the lawsuit alleges.
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