Health

  • April 20, 2026

    Colo. Judge Lets Pilot's $7.3M LASIK Verdict Exceed Cap

    A 27-year-old former pilot who claims an ophthalmology clinic destroyed his career after negligently clearing him for LASIK secured a $7.3 million judgment, after a Colorado judge found good cause to allow the award to go above the state's $1 million economic damages cap.

  • April 20, 2026

    Beasley Allen Pro Hac Vice Revoked In Philly J&J Talc Cases

    A Pennsylvania state court has booted Beasley Allen Law Firm attorneys from representing consumers in nine cases that link Johnson & Johnson's talcum powder to ovarian cancer, saying their pro hac vice admission was inappropriate given the firm's dealings with an attorney who previously represented the company.

  • April 20, 2026

    Pa. Court Strikes Down Ban On Medicaid-Paid Abortions

    A divided Pennsylvania Commonwealth Court struck down a ban on Medicaid funding for abortions, declaring Monday that the ban violates a fundamental right to reproductive autonomy under the state's constitution and illegally discriminates on the basis of sex.

  • April 20, 2026

    'Kind Of Lawyering We Don't Like': Judge Rips Quinn Emanuel

    Guardant Health Inc. urged a California federal judge on Monday to make Quinn Emanuel pay nearly $1.3 million on top of $3 million in sanctions already imposed over misrepresentations lawyers made representing its rival Natera Inc., prompting the judge to criticize Quinn Emanuel lawyers for making distinctions so fine they veer into misrepresentation.

  • April 20, 2026

    Providence Health's Sour Investment Cost $70M, Retirees Say

    Retirement plan participants have hit hospital system Providence Health & Services with a proposed class action accusing the Washington-based nonprofit of losing nearly $70 million in assets by sticking with an underperforming mutual fund that lagged behind similar investment options.

  • April 20, 2026

    No High Court Review In NY Nursing Home COVID Death Case

    The U.S. Supreme Court on Monday declined to review the dismissal of a civil suit against former New York Gov. Andrew Cuomo and other former state officials over COVID-19-related deaths in nursing homes that allegedly stemmed from the state's controversial early pandemic policies.

  • April 20, 2026

    SEC Says Adviser Traded On Firm Clients' Confidential Info

    The U.S. Securities and Exchange Commission sued an ex-investment advisory firm associate in Manhattan federal court on Monday, accusing him of using a close relative's brokerage account to trade ahead of market-moving announcements by three biopharmaceutical and biotechnology companies that his firm was researching.

  • April 20, 2026

    HR Director Says Telehealth Co. Fired Her After Miscarriage

    Iris Telehealth was hit with a lawsuit in Georgia federal court Monday from a former human resources manager who alleged she was not given the opportunity to take paid leave and was later fired after suffering a miscarriage last summer.

  • April 20, 2026

    PBMs Fail To Freeze Discovery In Mich.'s Drug-Pricing Case

    A pending motion to dismiss the Michigan attorney general's drug-pricing case against multiple pharmacy benefit managers does not preclude the PBMs from handing over agreements between PBMs and pharmacies to the state, a federal judge said in a motion hearing Monday.

  • April 20, 2026

    Doctors Fueled Man's Fatal Opioid Addiction, Philly Jury Told

    Counsel for the family of a man who died of an opioid overdose at age 26 told a Philadelphia jury that his doctors were responsible for pushing treatment plans that allowed him to develop an opioid addiction, leading to his untimely death, pointing to both physicians being paid speakers for the pharmaceutical companies whose medications they prescribed.

  • April 20, 2026

    Justices Won't Review Doctor's Captive Insurance Tax Fight

    The U.S. Supreme Court won't review the Internal Revenue Service's rejection of a Texas doctor's claim to $1 million in tax deductions linked to his urgent care network's captive insurance company, the court said Monday.

  • April 20, 2026

    Excess Insurer Says Healthcare Co. Can't Tap $25M Policy

    A private equity-backed hospital management company can't tap into its $25 million excess professional liability insurance for several underlying lawsuits until it forks over its $5 million self-insured retention payment, National Fire & Marine Insurance told a Tennessee federal court.

  • April 20, 2026

    Ex-Budget Official's Plea Hearing Fizzles In 2nd Bribery Case

    A change of plea hearing scheduled Monday afternoon in the second federal corruption trial of former Connecticut budget official Konstantinos M. Diamantis never materialized, with the parties emerging from chambers and leaving a Bridgeport courthouse without a judge entering the courtroom or going on the record. 

  • April 20, 2026

    Justices Mull Limits On Federal Review Of State Cases

    The U.S. Supreme Court on Monday wrestled with the potential impact of reining in — or even scrapping altogether — a 100-year-old doctrine that curbs litigants' ability to go to federal court to try to overturn a state court loss.

  • April 20, 2026

    Inspired Healthcare Creditors Object To Reid Collins Retention

    Inspired Healthcare's unsecured creditors have urged a Texas bankruptcy judge to deny the company's bid to retain Reid Collins & Tsai LLP to help investigate the debtor's pre-Chapter 11 conduct, saying that task should fall to unsecured creditors instead.

  • April 20, 2026

    'Unserious Leaders Are Unsafe': RFK Jr.'s Trans Edict Voided

    An Oregon federal judge struck down Health and Human Services Secretary Robert F. Kennedy Jr.'s efforts to enforce the agency's restrictions on gender-affirming care for minors, finding the restrictions unlawful and criticizing Kennedy's leadership and the policy declaration that introduced the changes. 

  • April 20, 2026

    GSK, Moderna Both Ordered To Provide More Info In Vax Fight

    A special master overseeing discovery disputes in GlaxoSmithKline's infringement suits over Moderna's COVID-19 and related respiratory syncytial virus vaccines ordered both companies to furnish information to each other, including financial data and licenses, according to an opinion unsealed Monday.

  • April 20, 2026

    Trump Orders Agencies To Fast-Track Psychedelic Therapies

    President Donald Trump on Saturday announced that his administration would instruct federal agencies to accelerate investigations into new therapies derived from psychedelic drugs and streamline patients' access to the treatments.

  • April 20, 2026

    Justices Won't Block Multimillion-Dollar Health Fraud Retrial

    A man accused of pocketing $12 million as a part of a larger $140 million scheme to defraud public and private healthcare programs can't get out of a second trial, as the U.S. Supreme Court declined to review his case on Monday.

  • April 20, 2026

    Catching Up With Delaware's Chancery Court

    The Delaware Chancery Court this past week delivered another mix of procedural rulings, fiduciary duty disputes and deal litigation, highlighting both the court's gatekeeping role and its continued focus on stockholder rights and transactional fairness.

  • April 20, 2026

    Kirkland, Goodwin Guide Lilly's Potential $7B Kelonia Buy

    Kirkland & Ellis LLP-advised pharmaceutical giant Eli Lilly & Co. on Monday announced plans to acquire clinical-stage biotechnology company Kelonia Therapeutics, led by Goodwin Procter LLP, in a deal worth up to $7 billion.

  • April 20, 2026

    3 Firms Advise Blue Owl's $2.4B Tampa Healthcare REIT Buy

    Blue Owl Capital agreed to pay $2.4 billion for healthcare-focused real estate investment trust Sila Realty Trust in a take-private deal announced Monday advised by Hogan Lovells, Kirkland & Ellis LLP and Dechert LLP.

  • April 20, 2026

    High Court Won't Hear 3rd Circ. J&J Class Cert. Appeal

    The U.S. Supreme Court on Monday said it won't review a class certification challenge in a securities class action over Johnson & Johnson's cancer-related talc products in the latest development in a closely watched dispute over how courts evaluate class certification in shareholder suits.

  • April 20, 2026

    Justices Won't Consider IP Theft Allegations Against Akin

    The U.S. Supreme Court on Monday rejected a former Cornell University graduate student's petition trying to revive his malpractice suit against Akin Gump Strauss Hauer & Feld LLP stemming from patent litigation against Illumina Inc. over DNA sequencing intellectual property.

  • April 17, 2026

    ITC Clears Apple's Redesigned Apple Watch For Import

    The U.S. International Trade Commission on Friday signed off on an administrative law judge's finding that Apple has sufficiently redesigned its smartwatch so it doesn't infringe Masimo Corp.'s patents and is therefore not bound by a 2023 import ban.

Expert Analysis

  • The Challenge Of Stabilizing Rural Hospitals On The Brink

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    The outlook for rural hospitals has grown more concerning, as recent policy and regulatory developments are decreasing hospital revenues and increasing the cost of uncompensated care, which may result in additional hospital closures, service reductions, or mergers and acquisitions, say Omur Celmanbet, Kristy Piccinini and Sabiha Quddus at FTI Consulting.

  • Insurer Lessons From 1st Wave Of GenAI Coverage Rulings

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    Several pending cases target the issue of whether generative AI may appropriately replace human professional decision-making, and though each case is still in discovery, the decisions thus far provide insurers with guidance on how courts may view these claims, say attorneys at Simpson Thacher.

  • The Role Of Operational Data In Tech Platform Liability Suits

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    As litigation becomes a de facto substitute for the regulation of major technology platforms, with plaintiffs advancing claims under product liability, public nuisance and consumer protection laws, among others, courts are evaluating how platform systems operate in practice based on large-scale operational data, say attorneys at Brattle.

  • 2 Discovery Rulings Break With Heppner On AI Privilege Issue

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    While a New York federal court’s recent ruling in U.S. v. Heppner suggests that some litigants’ communications with AI tools are discoverable, two other recent federal court decisions demonstrate that such interactions generally qualify for work-product protection under the Federal Rules of Civil Procedure, says Joshua Dunn at Brown Rudnick.

  • Bid Protest Spotlight: Evidence, Tailored Talks, Materiality

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    In this month's bid protest roundup, Brian Doll at MoFo delves into three recent decisions from the Government Accountability Office about the evidentiary standards necessary to sustain a protest, discussions tailored to individual proposals, and misrepresentation claims involving factors irrelevant to the agency's decision.

  • Series

    Isshin-Ryu Karate Makes Me A Better Lawyer

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    My involvement in martial arts, specifically Isshin-ryu, which has principles rooted in the eight codes of karate, has been one of the most foundational in the development of my personality, and particularly my approach to challenges — including in my practice of law, says Kaitlyn Stone at Barnes & Thornburg.

  • Class Actions At The Circuit Courts: April Lessons

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    In this month's review of class action appeals, Mitchell Engel at Shook Hardy identifies practice tips from three recent rulings involving allegations of racial discrimination in mortgage applications, health insurance networks and actual cash value losses.

  • Fraud Enforcement, Sentencing Face Unusual Convergence

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    The Trump administration’s newly created task force to eliminate fraud and the U.S. Sentencing Commission’s recent proposals to scale back certain elements of the federal sentencing framework seem to point in opposite directions, creating a collision of policy priorities that may reshape how fraud cases are charged, negotiated and sentenced for years to come, says David Tarras at Tarras Defense.

  • Peptide Policy Is Shifting Toward Sanctioned Compounding

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    The policy landscape for peptides is undergoing a significant shift under the Trump administration, moving toward a complex system of verified compounding and complementary enforcement that will likely bring peptides firmly back into the sphere of legitimate consumer products, say attorneys at Sheppard.

  • Keys To Building Defensible Psychedelic Therapy Programs

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    Given the rapidly evolving legal environment for psychedelic therapies and heightened liability and compliance risks facing providers, meticulous documentation, robust risk management protocols, and proactive engagement with professional organizations and insurers are essential strategies, say Kimberly Chew at Husch Blackwell and L. Alison McInnes at Mindful Health Solutions.

  • Opinion

    State Bars Need To Get Specific About AI Confidentiality

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    Lawyers need to put actual client information into artificial intelligence tools to get their full value, but they cannot confidently do so until state bars offer clear, formal authority on which plan tiers of the three most popular generative AI tools are safe to use when sharing specific client details, says attorney Nick Berk.

  • Trump Order Signals Tougher Benefits Fraud Probes

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    A recent order from President Donald Trump establishing a federal taskforce for addressing fraud in federally funded benefit programs emphasizes interagency information sharing, potentially affecting a broad range of areas including government contracts, administrative law considerations and False Claims Act cases, say attorneys at Morgan Lewis.

  • Opinion

    Judicial Restraint Anchors Constitutional Order

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    Contrasting opinions in two recent U.S. Supreme Court rulings — Trump v. CASA and Bost v. Illinois State Board of Elections — demonstrate how the judiciary’s constitutionally entrusted role can easily be preserved or disrupted, and invite renewed attention to the enduring importance of judicial restraint, says Ninth Circuit Judge J. Clifford Wallace.

  • The Evolution Of States' Workplace Violence Prevention Laws

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    Utah's new law requiring hospitals to implement comprehensive workplace violence reporting systems continues a broader trend of state efforts to expand workplace protections in the absence of sufficient federal regulations, say attorneys at Ogletree.

  • Series

    Alpine Skiing Makes Me A Better Lawyer

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    Skiing has shaped habits I rely on daily as an attorney — focus, resilience and the ability to remain steady when circumstances shift rapidly — and influences the way I approach legal strategy, client counseling and teamwork, says Isaku Begert at Marshall Gerstein.

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