Health Law as Private Law
Pathology or Pathway
Herausgeber: Shachar, Carmel; Epstein, Wendy Netter; Baruch, Susannah; Cohen, I. Glenn; Robertson, Christopher
Health Law as Private Law
Pathology or Pathway
Herausgeber: Shachar, Carmel; Epstein, Wendy Netter; Baruch, Susannah; Cohen, I. Glenn; Robertson, Christopher
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This volume explores the intersection of private law and health care, and how private law can be a tool for achieving health care reform or addressing public health problems. It includes innovative conceptualizations and advances inventive approaches to applying private health law that influence future policy, jurisprudence, and regulation.
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This volume explores the intersection of private law and health care, and how private law can be a tool for achieving health care reform or addressing public health problems. It includes innovative conceptualizations and advances inventive approaches to applying private health law that influence future policy, jurisprudence, and regulation.
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Hinweis: Dieser Artikel kann nur an eine deutsche Lieferadresse ausgeliefert werden.
Produktdetails
- Produktdetails
- Verlag: Cambridge University Press
- Seitenzahl: 320
- Erscheinungstermin: 31. März 2025
- Englisch
- ISBN-13: 9781009480451
- ISBN-10: 1009480456
- Artikelnr.: 72109793
- Herstellerkennzeichnung
- Libri GmbH
- Europaallee 1
- 36244 Bad Hersfeld
- gpsr@libri.de
- Verlag: Cambridge University Press
- Seitenzahl: 320
- Erscheinungstermin: 31. März 2025
- Englisch
- ISBN-13: 9781009480451
- ISBN-10: 1009480456
- Artikelnr.: 72109793
- Herstellerkennzeichnung
- Libri GmbH
- Europaallee 1
- 36244 Bad Hersfeld
- gpsr@libri.de
Introduction Susannah Baruch, I. Glenn Cohen, Wendy Netter Epstein,
Christopher Robertson, and Carmel Shachar; Part I. What is Private Law?
Theory and Structure: 1. Public funds, public functions, private actors:
the cognitive dissonance of US health law William Sage; 2. Private ordering
is ubiquitous in health care, but why? Barbara J. Evans; 3. Abandoning
fiduciaries in health care Lauren R. Roth; 4. European distinctions between
private and public law in health care and the emerging influence of private
lobbies Barry Solaiman; Part II. Tools of Private Law: Torts, Contracts,
and Property as Vehicles of Health Policy: Introduction Wendy Netter
Epstein; 5. Data transparency, ERISA preemption, and freedom of contract
Craig Konnoth; 6. States as contractor: attempts to drive health care cost
containment through state purchasing power Christine H. Monahan, Maanasa
Kona and Madeline O'Brien; 7. Adaptation of tort law to modern health care
delivery in the restatement of medical malpractice Mark A. Hall; 8.
Pandemic harms and private law's limits: a proposal for tort replacement
Jill R. Horwitz, Alberto De Diego Carreras and Daniel B. Rodriguez; 9. The
human body commons: a private law contribution for the advancement of the
right to health Enrique Santamaría Echeverría; Part III .Russian Dolls,
Reproduction, and Private Law: Introduction I. Glenn Cohen; 10.
Employer-sponsored abortion coverage: private law's role in reproductive
freedom Valarie K. Blake and Elizabeth Y. McCuskey; 11 Reproductive
innovation and reproductive exceptionalism: how private health insurance
coverage of fertility treatment compliments hostile governmental action and
expands access to assisted reproduction in the United States Myrisha Lewis;
12. Business Responses to Dobbs: the return to a 'reproductive rights'
approach, and suspicions around corporate care Asees Bhasin; 13.
Privatizing the creation of equity in women's health Thomas Williams; Part
IV. Controlling Costs: Private Law's Impact on Health Care Financing and
Pricing: Introduction Christopher Robertson; 14. Federalism, private law,
and medical debt Erin C. Fuse Brown; 15. Paying for health care and private
law's internal point of view James Toomey; 16. Health law's sheathed sword:
why hasn't civil litigation dented health care costs? Jackson Williams; 17.
The canary in the coal mine: private antitrust law and new dynamics in
health care markets Jaime S. King 18. Health care finance law's relational
bias Jessica Mantel; Part V. Private Law Applied: The Pharmaceutical
Industry, Nursing Homes, and the End of Life: Introduction Carmel Shachar;
19. Private equity firms and digital clinical trials: tensions between
efficiency and drug evidence access Ximena Benavides; 20. Shareholder
resolutions and access to medications Rebecca E. Wolitz; 21. The
hollowed-out American nursing home: using private law to police poor
quality care and expand owner responsibilities Barry Furrow; 22. Health
Care organization policies about the California end of life option act: the
paper victory of the medical aid in dying movement Megan Wright and Cindy
L. Cain.
Christopher Robertson, and Carmel Shachar; Part I. What is Private Law?
Theory and Structure: 1. Public funds, public functions, private actors:
the cognitive dissonance of US health law William Sage; 2. Private ordering
is ubiquitous in health care, but why? Barbara J. Evans; 3. Abandoning
fiduciaries in health care Lauren R. Roth; 4. European distinctions between
private and public law in health care and the emerging influence of private
lobbies Barry Solaiman; Part II. Tools of Private Law: Torts, Contracts,
and Property as Vehicles of Health Policy: Introduction Wendy Netter
Epstein; 5. Data transparency, ERISA preemption, and freedom of contract
Craig Konnoth; 6. States as contractor: attempts to drive health care cost
containment through state purchasing power Christine H. Monahan, Maanasa
Kona and Madeline O'Brien; 7. Adaptation of tort law to modern health care
delivery in the restatement of medical malpractice Mark A. Hall; 8.
Pandemic harms and private law's limits: a proposal for tort replacement
Jill R. Horwitz, Alberto De Diego Carreras and Daniel B. Rodriguez; 9. The
human body commons: a private law contribution for the advancement of the
right to health Enrique Santamaría Echeverría; Part III .Russian Dolls,
Reproduction, and Private Law: Introduction I. Glenn Cohen; 10.
Employer-sponsored abortion coverage: private law's role in reproductive
freedom Valarie K. Blake and Elizabeth Y. McCuskey; 11 Reproductive
innovation and reproductive exceptionalism: how private health insurance
coverage of fertility treatment compliments hostile governmental action and
expands access to assisted reproduction in the United States Myrisha Lewis;
12. Business Responses to Dobbs: the return to a 'reproductive rights'
approach, and suspicions around corporate care Asees Bhasin; 13.
Privatizing the creation of equity in women's health Thomas Williams; Part
IV. Controlling Costs: Private Law's Impact on Health Care Financing and
Pricing: Introduction Christopher Robertson; 14. Federalism, private law,
and medical debt Erin C. Fuse Brown; 15. Paying for health care and private
law's internal point of view James Toomey; 16. Health law's sheathed sword:
why hasn't civil litigation dented health care costs? Jackson Williams; 17.
The canary in the coal mine: private antitrust law and new dynamics in
health care markets Jaime S. King 18. Health care finance law's relational
bias Jessica Mantel; Part V. Private Law Applied: The Pharmaceutical
Industry, Nursing Homes, and the End of Life: Introduction Carmel Shachar;
19. Private equity firms and digital clinical trials: tensions between
efficiency and drug evidence access Ximena Benavides; 20. Shareholder
resolutions and access to medications Rebecca E. Wolitz; 21. The
hollowed-out American nursing home: using private law to police poor
quality care and expand owner responsibilities Barry Furrow; 22. Health
Care organization policies about the California end of life option act: the
paper victory of the medical aid in dying movement Megan Wright and Cindy
L. Cain.
Introduction Susannah Baruch, I. Glenn Cohen, Wendy Netter Epstein,
Christopher Robertson, and Carmel Shachar; Part I. What is Private Law?
Theory and Structure: 1. Public funds, public functions, private actors:
the cognitive dissonance of US health law William Sage; 2. Private ordering
is ubiquitous in health care, but why? Barbara J. Evans; 3. Abandoning
fiduciaries in health care Lauren R. Roth; 4. European distinctions between
private and public law in health care and the emerging influence of private
lobbies Barry Solaiman; Part II. Tools of Private Law: Torts, Contracts,
and Property as Vehicles of Health Policy: Introduction Wendy Netter
Epstein; 5. Data transparency, ERISA preemption, and freedom of contract
Craig Konnoth; 6. States as contractor: attempts to drive health care cost
containment through state purchasing power Christine H. Monahan, Maanasa
Kona and Madeline O'Brien; 7. Adaptation of tort law to modern health care
delivery in the restatement of medical malpractice Mark A. Hall; 8.
Pandemic harms and private law's limits: a proposal for tort replacement
Jill R. Horwitz, Alberto De Diego Carreras and Daniel B. Rodriguez; 9. The
human body commons: a private law contribution for the advancement of the
right to health Enrique Santamaría Echeverría; Part III .Russian Dolls,
Reproduction, and Private Law: Introduction I. Glenn Cohen; 10.
Employer-sponsored abortion coverage: private law's role in reproductive
freedom Valarie K. Blake and Elizabeth Y. McCuskey; 11 Reproductive
innovation and reproductive exceptionalism: how private health insurance
coverage of fertility treatment compliments hostile governmental action and
expands access to assisted reproduction in the United States Myrisha Lewis;
12. Business Responses to Dobbs: the return to a 'reproductive rights'
approach, and suspicions around corporate care Asees Bhasin; 13.
Privatizing the creation of equity in women's health Thomas Williams; Part
IV. Controlling Costs: Private Law's Impact on Health Care Financing and
Pricing: Introduction Christopher Robertson; 14. Federalism, private law,
and medical debt Erin C. Fuse Brown; 15. Paying for health care and private
law's internal point of view James Toomey; 16. Health law's sheathed sword:
why hasn't civil litigation dented health care costs? Jackson Williams; 17.
The canary in the coal mine: private antitrust law and new dynamics in
health care markets Jaime S. King 18. Health care finance law's relational
bias Jessica Mantel; Part V. Private Law Applied: The Pharmaceutical
Industry, Nursing Homes, and the End of Life: Introduction Carmel Shachar;
19. Private equity firms and digital clinical trials: tensions between
efficiency and drug evidence access Ximena Benavides; 20. Shareholder
resolutions and access to medications Rebecca E. Wolitz; 21. The
hollowed-out American nursing home: using private law to police poor
quality care and expand owner responsibilities Barry Furrow; 22. Health
Care organization policies about the California end of life option act: the
paper victory of the medical aid in dying movement Megan Wright and Cindy
L. Cain.
Christopher Robertson, and Carmel Shachar; Part I. What is Private Law?
Theory and Structure: 1. Public funds, public functions, private actors:
the cognitive dissonance of US health law William Sage; 2. Private ordering
is ubiquitous in health care, but why? Barbara J. Evans; 3. Abandoning
fiduciaries in health care Lauren R. Roth; 4. European distinctions between
private and public law in health care and the emerging influence of private
lobbies Barry Solaiman; Part II. Tools of Private Law: Torts, Contracts,
and Property as Vehicles of Health Policy: Introduction Wendy Netter
Epstein; 5. Data transparency, ERISA preemption, and freedom of contract
Craig Konnoth; 6. States as contractor: attempts to drive health care cost
containment through state purchasing power Christine H. Monahan, Maanasa
Kona and Madeline O'Brien; 7. Adaptation of tort law to modern health care
delivery in the restatement of medical malpractice Mark A. Hall; 8.
Pandemic harms and private law's limits: a proposal for tort replacement
Jill R. Horwitz, Alberto De Diego Carreras and Daniel B. Rodriguez; 9. The
human body commons: a private law contribution for the advancement of the
right to health Enrique Santamaría Echeverría; Part III .Russian Dolls,
Reproduction, and Private Law: Introduction I. Glenn Cohen; 10.
Employer-sponsored abortion coverage: private law's role in reproductive
freedom Valarie K. Blake and Elizabeth Y. McCuskey; 11 Reproductive
innovation and reproductive exceptionalism: how private health insurance
coverage of fertility treatment compliments hostile governmental action and
expands access to assisted reproduction in the United States Myrisha Lewis;
12. Business Responses to Dobbs: the return to a 'reproductive rights'
approach, and suspicions around corporate care Asees Bhasin; 13.
Privatizing the creation of equity in women's health Thomas Williams; Part
IV. Controlling Costs: Private Law's Impact on Health Care Financing and
Pricing: Introduction Christopher Robertson; 14. Federalism, private law,
and medical debt Erin C. Fuse Brown; 15. Paying for health care and private
law's internal point of view James Toomey; 16. Health law's sheathed sword:
why hasn't civil litigation dented health care costs? Jackson Williams; 17.
The canary in the coal mine: private antitrust law and new dynamics in
health care markets Jaime S. King 18. Health care finance law's relational
bias Jessica Mantel; Part V. Private Law Applied: The Pharmaceutical
Industry, Nursing Homes, and the End of Life: Introduction Carmel Shachar;
19. Private equity firms and digital clinical trials: tensions between
efficiency and drug evidence access Ximena Benavides; 20. Shareholder
resolutions and access to medications Rebecca E. Wolitz; 21. The
hollowed-out American nursing home: using private law to police poor
quality care and expand owner responsibilities Barry Furrow; 22. Health
Care organization policies about the California end of life option act: the
paper victory of the medical aid in dying movement Megan Wright and Cindy
L. Cain.