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Professional negligence

May 2002 | Volume 38, Issue 5

Suing the hospital when Superdoc falls
James W. Gustafson Jr. and Thomas D. Masterson

Hospitals brag about the caliber of "their" doctors-until a staff physician commits malpractice. Here's how to hold the offending hospital liable for its pumped-up advertisements and promotions.

Reading the Rx right is not enough
Frank M. McClellan

There's a new message in that prescription bottle. Some courts are shifting their views on pharmacists' obligations to their clients from a mere duty to fill prescriptions accurately to the responsibility for warning or counseling patients about the risks and benefits of medications. Here's how to dispense relief for those harmed by pharmacists' mistakes.

When clergy fail their flocks
Richard Serbin

Members of the ministry, like other professionals, are liable when their actions harm others. As more cases are filed, media continue to explore church scandals. Learn how to reveal in litigation what's behind the stained glass that shields wayward clergy.

Protect yourself from suit
Ronald E. Mallen and Thomas P. Sukowicz

Sometimes the cases you refuse are more important than the ones you take. The authors suggest practical techniques for screening potential clients to avoid becoming a defendant.

How to derail Daubert motions in obstetrical cases
Dov Apfel

An obstetrical negligence case might give birth to a challenge of your expert by the defense. Knowing the other side's tactics and the federal rules can help you face Daubert dilemmas.

Features

Silver linings

A verdict for the defense can rain on your parade. But in this symposium, three former ATLA presidents Rich Hailey, Mark Mandell, and Barry Nacetell how they turned losses to victories.

News & Trends

Baseball pitchers in line of fire, jury decides; bat makers liable

Supreme Court further expands state sovereign immunity

North Carolina court rejects arbitration without consent

Massachusetts rules out attorney sanctions for ex parte contact

California clarifies third-party liability for workplace injuries

Lawyers work overtime on wage-and-hour suits

New York allows drunk drivers widow to sue automaker

High Court lightens burden on employment discrimination plaintiffs

Federal judge rules Connecticut juvenile justice system violates kids constitutional rights

Military personnel can sue for invasion of privacy

Court considers proposals to improve Florida jury system

Departments

President's page
New rules and opportunities for campaign financing

Washington focus
Under the radar

Law office technology
Pick a powerful Palm

Reflections
Less is more in trial

Supreme Court review
Can plaintiffs make disparate-impact claims in age discrimination cases?

Good counsel

Discoveries

Quotes

Classifieds

Classifieds

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Balancing the Scales of Justice
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