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February 18, 2026
Pa. Providers Say They Lost Billions In Change Health Breach
The health payment platform Change Health Inc., which was at the center of the nation's largest healthcare data breach two years ago, is facing a fresh lawsuit from a proposed class of Pennsylvania healthcare providers who claim they lost billions in payments during the breach.
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February 18, 2026
Anti-Abortion Clinics Lose Free Speech Suit Over Mass. Ads
A Massachusetts federal judge has tossed a lawsuit over a state-funded ad campaign warning consumers about potentially misleading or inaccurate information provided by a group of anti-abortion pregnancy resource centers, finding that the state hadn't prohibited the clinics from operating — and that the public officials have the same free speech rights as the clinics.
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February 18, 2026
Va.'s Privia Medical Group Doctor Sues In Del. For Records
A physician member of Virginia-based Privia Medical Group LLC has sued the company in Delaware Chancery Court, accusing it of stonewalling her efforts to inspect books and records under the company's operating agreement amid concerns about insurance reimbursement practices and related risks.
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February 18, 2026
NextGen's $19M Data Breach Deal Gets Judge's Approval
A Georgia federal judge gave his final sign-off to a $19 million-plus deal between NextGen Healthcare and more than a million customers whose personal information was compromised in a 2023 data breach.
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February 17, 2026
$500M Medical Glove Feud Must Be Arbitrated, Court Hears
A medical gloves supplier is arguing that a Malaysian exporter must arbitrate its $500 million fraud and breach of contract suit after the two had a falling out stemming from a massive COVID-19-era pact aimed at supplying repackaged nitrile gloves to Walmart.
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February 17, 2026
Chancery Disallows Arbitration In No Surprises Act Cases
In a "narrow" first impression ruling, a Delaware magistrate in Chancery has rejected claims that the federal No Surprises Act provides for a narrow private right to seek the enforcement of an arbitration award in litigation over medical bills involving the act.
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February 17, 2026
Judge Rips Drugmakers' Borderline 'Disingenuous' Appeal Bid
A Connecticut federal judge has rejected generic-drug makers' request for a quick appeal of his ruling denying them summary judgment on states' claims they engaged in an "overarching conspiracy" to fix prices, slamming the request for being borderline "disingenuous," mischaracterizing his reasoning and ignoring direct evidence of alleged wrongdoing.
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February 17, 2026
Union Says Express Scripts Diverted Billions In Kickback Fees
A Chicago plumbers union healthcare fund told an Illinois federal court Tuesday that the nation's largest pharmacy benefit manager, Express Scripts, violated federal criminal law when it used a Switzerland-based company to hide kickbacks it generated by charging drug companies fees for key placement on prescription plan drug lists.
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February 17, 2026
Conn. Judge Says Attys 'Unprepared' At Pretrial Conference
A Connecticut state judge on Tuesday chastised the parties in a medical malpractice case where the plaintiffs have sought more than $12 million, saying they were "completely unprepared" and "utterly ignored" a previous scheduling order.
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February 17, 2026
Squires Ends IPR After ITC Judge Rejects Validity Challenge
U.S. Patent and Trademark Office Director John Squires ended a Patent Trial and Appeal Board review of a Hydrafacial LLC skin treatment patent since the same issue had already been adjudicated in the U.S. International Trade Commission.
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February 17, 2026
McGuireWoods Adds Sidley Private Equity Pro In Los Angeles
McGuireWoods LLP is expanding its transactional team, announcing Tuesday that it is bringing in a Sidley Austin LLP private equity expert as a partner in its Los Angeles office.
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February 17, 2026
Providence Health Inks $43M Deal In 401(k) Forfeiture Suit
Providence Health & Services has struck a nearly $43 million deal to end a suit claiming the company used forfeited cash from its retirement plan to fund its employer contributions instead of plan expenses covered by workers, an agreement that stands to benefit 200,000 class members.
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February 17, 2026
3 Firms Advise On $9.9B Danaher, Masimo Diagnostics Deal
Danaher Corp. said Tuesday it has agreed to acquire Masimo Corp. in a deal valued at about $9.9 billion, including debt, with Kirkland & Ellis LLP advising Danaher and Sullivan & Cromwell LLP and White & Case LLP representing Masimo.
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February 17, 2026
Ex-Federal Workers Say Reductions Were 'Political' Firings
A group of more than 140 ex-federal employees has sued the U.S. Department of Justice and other federal agencies in Maryland federal court, challenging the Trump administration's use of "reductions in force" to make what they contend are politically motivated firings.
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February 17, 2026
Colo. Judge Allows Hospital To Pause Gender-Affirming Care
A Colorado state judge declined to reinstate gender-affirming care for transgender youth patients of Children's Hospital Colorado, ruling that ordering the hospital to resume providing the care could risk the hospital's ability to provide pediatric care to other patients.
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February 17, 2026
Nurse, Staffing Cos. Settle 'Indentured Servitude' Suit For $1M
Two healthcare staffing companies will pay $1 million to end a proposed class and collective action claiming they engaged in "indentured servitude" by forcing nurses to repay visa-related costs, according to an Ohio federal court filing.
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February 17, 2026
Edwards Sued In Chancery Over $300M Heart Valve Earn-Out
The former shareholders of Valtech Cardio Ltd. have sued the company and its parent Edwards Lifesciences Corp. in the Delaware Chancery Court, accusing the medical device giant of deliberately stalling development of a heart valve repair system to avoid paying up to $300 million in earn-out consideration tied to the 2016 acquisition.
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February 17, 2026
Home Health Co. Nurses Are Employees, Judge Rules
A home healthcare company misclassified its licensed practical nurses as independent contractors, a Pennsylvania federal judge ruled in a suit brought by the U.S. Department of Labor, saying a jury should decide how much overtime the workers are owed.
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February 13, 2026
RFK Jr. Taps Ex-Jones Day Atty For FDA Senior Counselor
U.S. Department of Health and Human Services Secretary Robert F. Kennedy Jr. has named a former Jones Day partner as one of the U.S. Food and Drug Administration's senior counselors, according to an announcement.
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February 13, 2026
States' Generic Drugs Antitrust Case Headed Toward Trial
A Connecticut federal judge has mostly refused to side with pharmaceutical companies facing states' generic drug price-fixing litigation against them, ruling that there are genuine disputes of material fact as to drug distribution chains and the states' antitrust standing and teeing up the case for trial.
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February 13, 2026
Health Exec Says He Was Fired For Opposing 'Enron-Style' Plot
Jefferson Health System terminated its former vice president of facilities management over "his refusal to participate in" what he described as "an Enron-style financial engineering scheme" related to a proposed energy-as-a-service transaction that he believed posed serious regulatory risks, according to a suit filed in Pennsylvania.
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February 13, 2026
Ga. Judge Rejects 'Conspiracy Theories' Behind DQ Bid
A Georgia federal judge rejected Friday a Florida couple's bid to disqualify the judge overseeing their medical malpractice case after it was tossed for using falsified video footage, writing that the effort was based on "nothing but speculative and attenuated conspiracy theories."
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February 13, 2026
Docs Urge Judge To Block CDC's Childhood Vaccine Changes
Doctors organizations Friday urged a Massachusetts federal judge to stop the government from implementing its new, shorter list of recommended vaccines for children and prevent the next meeting of a committee they say has been tainted by anti-vaccine influence.
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February 13, 2026
Iowa AG Urges 8th Circ. To Unblock Parts Of State PBM Law
The state of Iowa urged the Eighth Circuit on Friday to lift a preliminary block on parts of a law limiting pharmacy benefit managers' power to set drug prices in the Hawkeye State, arguing a lower court judge erred in holding that parts of the policy were federally preempted.
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February 13, 2026
State Lawmakers Advance Flurry Of Psilocybin Reform Bills
Since the beginning of the year, lawmakers in several states have introduced and advanced numerous bills regarding psilocybin, the active compound in psychoactive mushrooms, including bills decriminalizing it, funding research into its medical uses and establishing a regulated medical program.
Expert Analysis
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The 5 Most Important Bid Protest Decisions Of 2025
In a shifting bid protest landscape, five decisions in 2025 from the Federal Circuit, the U.S. Court of Federal Claims and the U.S. Government Accountability Office that addressed bedrock questions about jurisdictional reach and the breadth of agency discretion are likely to have a lasting impact, say attorneys at Bradley Arant.
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Food Industry Braces For MAHA And Other Challenges In 2026
After the Make America Healthy Again movement kept the U.S. Food and Drug Administration under pressure in 2025, actions in the food safety space are likely to continue this year, including updated Supplemental Nutrition Assistance Program dietary guidelines and processed food definitions, say attorneys at Wiley.
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Preparing For Congressional Investigations In A Midterm Year
2026 will be a consequential year for congressional oversight as the upcoming midterm elections may yield bolder investigations and more aggressive state attorneys general coalitions, so companies should consider adopting risk management measures to get ahead of potential changes, say attorneys at Morgan Lewis.
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A Meaningful Shift In FDA's Biosimilarity Analysis
The U.S. Food and Drug Administration's potential pivot away from routinely requiring comparative efficacy studies for interchangeable biosimilar applications would not lower regulatory standards, but instead allow applicants to allocate resources toward establishing more probative evidence, says Theodore Thompson at Stinson.
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Employment Immigration Trends And Challenges For 2026
U.S. companies competing for global talent should brace for a turbulent 2026, with greater compliance burdens, higher costs and the probability of workforce disruptions at every stage of the immigration process, from visa petitions to work authorization renewals, say attorneys at Duane Morris.
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Top 5 Antitrust Issues For In-House Counsel To Watch In 2026
With Trump administration enforcement policy having largely taken shape last year, antitrust issues that in-house counsel should have on the radar range from scrutiny of technology-assisted pricing to the return of merger remedies, say attorneys at Squire Patton.
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4 Developments That Defined The 2025 Ethics Landscape
The legal profession spent 2025 at the edge of its ethical comfort zone as courts, firms and regulators confronted how fast-moving technologies and new business models collide with long-standing professional duties, signaling that the profession is entering a period of sustained disruption that will continue into 2026, says Hilary Gerzhoy at HWG Law.
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Navigating AI In The Legal Industry
As artificial intelligence becomes an increasingly integral part of legal practice, Law360 guest commentary this year examined evolving ethical obligations, how the plaintiffs bar is using AI to level the playing field against corporate defense teams, and the attendant risks of adoption.
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How Fractional GCs Can Manage Risks Of Engagement
As more organizations eliminate their in-house legal departments in favor of outsourcing legal work, fractional general counsel roles offer practitioners an engaging and flexible way to practice at a high level, but they can also present legal, ethical and operational risks that must be proactively managed, say attorneys at Boies Schiller.
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Health, Legal Employers Face Unique Online Speech Hurdles
Employers in the legal and healthcare industries must consider distinctive ethical obligations and professional requirements when disciplining employees for social media posts, while anticipating an area of the law in flux as courts seek to balance speech rights and the workplace function, say attorneys at FordHarrison.
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Reviewing 2025's Most Pertinent Wiretap Developments
2025 was a remarkable year in the world of web tracking wiretapping litigation, not only for the increased caseload but also because of numerous developing theories of liability, with disputes expected to continue unabated in 2026, say attorneys at Squire Patton.
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2025 Legal Milestones That Will Shape Psychedelics Sector
As 2025 draws to a close, psychedelic drug development stands at an inflection point, experiencing unprecedented momentum through recent sweeping regulatory changes and landmark clinical milestones, amid rapidly evolving regulatory expectations, say Odette Hauke at Odette Alina LLC and Kimberly Chew at Husch Blackwell.
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Series
Nature Photography Makes Me A Better Lawyer
Nature photography reminds me to focus on what is in front of me and to slow down to achieve success, and, in embracing the value of viewing situations through different lenses, offers skills transferable to the practice of law, says Brian Willett at Saul Ewing.
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2025 State AI Laws Expand Liability, Raise Insurance Risks
As 2025 nears its end, claims professionals should be aware of trends in state legislation addressing artificial intelligence use, as insurance claims based on some of these liability-expanding statutes are a certainty, say attorneys at Wiley.
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Series
Law School's Missed Lessons: Practical Problem Solving
Issue-spotting skills are well honed in law school, but practicing attorneys must also identify clients’ problems and true goals, and then be able to provide solutions, says Mary Kate Hogan at Quarles & Brady.