More Healthcare Coverage

  • January 30, 2024

    Most Claims In $1.76B Vt. Hospital 403(b) Suit Can Proceed

    A Vermont federal judge on Tuesday declined to toss the bulk of a proposed class action federal benefits lawsuit from ex-workers for the University of Vermont Medical Center alleging their $1.76 billion retirement plan was saddled with underperforming funds and higher fees, but agreed to drop injunctive relief claims.

  • January 30, 2024

    7th Circ. Won't Revive School Staffers' COVID-Testing Suit

    The Seventh Circuit on Monday refused to reinstate a lawsuit brought by public school personnel challenging the Illinois governor's orders that they be tested regularly for COVID-19 unless they had been vaccinated, saying the plaintiffs improperly filed one suit in state court seeking declaratory and injunctive relief and a second in federal court seeking damages.

  • January 30, 2024

    UNC Prof Says He's Immune From Suit Over Party Pics Probe

    A University of North Carolina medical school professor has told the state Supreme Court that he's immune as a state official from a lawsuit alleging that he initiated a vindictive investigation into a bawdy going-away party resulting in an outgoing physician's pay being delayed.

  • January 30, 2024

    Man Asks 11th Circ. To Reduce Sentence For Med Device Fraud

    A businessman who received a 10-year prison sentence for buying discounted medical devices intended for Afghanistan but instead reselling them in the U.S. told the Eleventh Circuit on Tuesday that the district court overstated the loss to the medical device makers and erroneously enhanced his sentence as a result.

  • January 30, 2024

    Pfizer Says Moderna Telling FDA One Thing, PTAB Another

    Pfizer has told the Patent Trial and Appeal Board that the language Moderna used to quickly gain approval from the U.S. Food and Drug Administration for its COVID-19 vaccines should doom its efforts to defend its patents at the board, accusing it of pursuing a "litigation-driven one-eighty."

  • January 30, 2024

    Colo. Worker Says Pa. Staffing Agency Shorted Wages

    A Pennsylvania staffing agency has been underpaying its Colorado workers, slashing overtime wages by paying them only for their scheduled hours rather than hours they worked and rounding their time sheets to the nearest full hour, according to a proposed class action in Pennsylvania state court.

  • January 30, 2024

    Calif. County Workers Get Class Status In Vax Exemption Suit

    A California federal judge partly granted class certification to county workers who claim their religious exemptions to the COVID-19 vaccine were handled differently from other employees' health exemptions, saying that allegations of a common bias could help determine liability but that any damages calculations must be handled individually.

  • January 29, 2024

    Hearing Aid Co. Eargo Investors Ask 9th Circ. To Revive Suit

    Investors of Eargo Inc. have told the Ninth Circuit that a lower court erred in dismissing their class action against the hearing aid company since they sufficiently alleged the firm and its top brass acted with intent to commit insurance billing fraud.

  • January 29, 2024

    Insurer-Backed Docs Must Show Tax Records For Bias Check

    A split Michigan appellate court panel has said a car crash victim seeking coverage for his injuries can force the medical examiners hired by his insurer to turn over tax documents, finding the records are relevant to determine potential bias that couldn't be discovered otherwise.

  • January 29, 2024

    The Top Attys In Clinton's Impeachment Trial, 25 Years Later

    One of them just went to federal prison, and another famously beat a federal indictment. One has been seeking the White House, and another has been steering a BigLaw powerhouse. Each was among the two dozen attorneys who litigated President Bill Clinton's historic impeachment trial 25 years ago this month — and then saw their lives go in dramatically different directions.

  • January 29, 2024

    NYU Langone Wants Out Of Bias Suit Over Israel-Hamas Posts

    NYU Langone Health urged a New York state court to toss a suit claiming the healthcare system fired the head of its cancer center because he's Jewish and spoke out online about the Israel-Hamas war, arguing the offensive content of his social media posts warranted his removal.

  • January 29, 2024

    McCarter & English Urges Against Updating Malpractice Suit

    McCarter & English LLP has condemned a New Jersey biopharmaceutical company's latest attempt to amend its malpractice complaint against the firm, telling the court in a letter that some of the claims were time-barred or impossible to prove.

  • January 29, 2024

    Shumaker Can't Get Double Fees For Appeal, Wilkes Says

    An unpersuasive argument doesn't make an appeal frivolous or sanctionable, Wilkes & Associates PA has told a Florida federal court, urging it to reject Shumaker Loop & Kendrick LLP's request to double a bankruptcy court's fee award.

  • January 29, 2024

    Akerman Health Pro Jumps To Carlton Fields In Atlanta

    An Akerman LLP partner with more than three decades of life sciences experience under his belt has joined Carlton Fields in Atlanta, the firm announced Monday.

  • January 29, 2024

    CVS Must Face Suit Claiming It Favored South Asian Workers

    CVS can't avoid a proposed class action claiming it preferred Indian and other South Asian quality assurance consultants and laid off many Black employees, a Rhode Island federal judge said Monday, rejecting the retailer's arguments that the suit was vague and filed too late.

  • January 26, 2024

    COVID-19 Immunity Law Shields Hospital From Negligence

    A hospital is not liable for negligence claims after a patient sustained trip-and-fall injuries while exiting through a door designated for people being treated with monoclonal antibody infusion therapy, the Alabama Supreme Court said Friday.

  • January 26, 2024

    GSK Unit Pauses Chancery Patent Suit For Settlement Talks

    A specialty pharma company majority-owned by GlaxoSmithKline has agreed to stay its Delaware Chancery Court lawsuit against a San Francisco biotech startup it accuses of butting into a university research collaboration and taking control of patents that the startup doesn't own.

  • January 26, 2024

    GAO Rejects Challenge To Pentagon's $44B Medical Deal

    The U.S. Government Accountability Office rejected a medical firm's efforts to again upend a pending $44 billion defense contract for professional medical services, saying the Defense Health Agency's revamped evaluation methodology appropriately accounted for bidders' proposed pricing.

  • January 26, 2024

    Mich. Court Backs Order For Hospital's COVID Policy Records

    A Michigan hospital accused of medical malpractice and gross negligence must produce any documents it has showing whether doctors and nurses were directed to withhold CPR from COVID-19 patients in the early days of the pandemic, under a ruling issued Thursday by the state Court of Appeals.

  • January 26, 2024

    Geico Seeks $3M From Med Cos. In Claimed No-Fault Scheme

    Geico told a New Jersey federal court it is seeking to recover nearly $3 million from a group of New Jersey medical providers and their owners and practitioners who the insurer alleges partook in a no-fault charge scheme that defrauded the insurer's policyholders since 2017.

  • January 26, 2024

    Foot Doc Can't Outrun Suit Alleging Needless, Failed Surgery

    A podiatrist must face a lawsuit alleging she performed an unnecessary foot surgery that led to a corrective procedure and pain for her patient, as a Texas appellate court has ruled that a second doctor's "expert report" finding fault with the defendant's performance is sufficiently detailed for the suit to proceed.

  • January 26, 2024

    UK Litigation Roundup: Here's What You Missed In London

    The past week in London has seen Sainsbury’s Supermarkets face patent proceedings over a specific type of mandarin, Alexander Nix, the former chief of Cambridge Analytica, embroiled in further proceedings with Dynamo Recoveries, the sports management arm of Warner Bros raise a red card against crypto exchange Next Hash, and EY targeted in a libel claim by a consultancy firm. Here, Law360 looks at these and other new claims in the U.K.

  • January 25, 2024

    Eye Care Tech Co. Gets Tentative OK For $8M DIP

    Optometry software maker Eye Care Leaders received tentative approval Thursday from a Texas bankruptcy judge to tap into $8 million of debtor-in-possession financing from a private equity firm looking to buy the company in a Chapter 11 sale.

  • January 25, 2024

    Philly Children's Hospital Avoids Baby Brain Injury Suit

    A $7 million medical malpractice settlement for claims that an Ohio doctor's operation injured an unborn child precluded a separate lawsuit claiming that Children's Hospital of Philadelphia caused the same injuries by not treating the same issue, a Pennsylvania appellate court ruled Thursday.

  • January 25, 2024

    Conn. Judge OKs State Oversight Of Defunct Nursing School

    The state of Connecticut has inked a deal to supervise assets held by a shuttered for-profit nursing school accused of scamming its students in exchange for the government withdrawing its request for receivership, court documents show.

Expert Analysis

  • FCA Knowledge Element: NY Already Got It Right

    Author Photo

    In April, when the U.S. Supreme Court hears arguments in U.S. v. Supervalu and U.S. v. Safeway concerning the federal False Claims Act's knowledge component, it should consider the reasoning of a New York state court ruling that already reached the correct understanding, says Randall Fox at Kirby McInerney.

  • Evaluating Workplace Accommodations For Service Animals

    Author Photo

    In Bennett v. Hurley Medical Center, a Michigan federal court ruled in favor of the hospital after a nursing intern filed a disability discrimination lawsuit regarding her service dog, highlighting the importance of engaging in interactive processes and individualized actions in workplace accommodation decisions, say Keith Anderson and Anne Yuengert at Bradley Arant.

  • Fla. Bill Would Rein In Personal Injury Litigation Excesses

    Author Photo

    A recently proposed bill in the Florida House that would change bad-faith laws and the admissibility of medical bills for services performed under a letter of protection would provide reasonable checks on practices that are far too common in personal injury cases in the Sunshine State, say attorneys at Baker Donelson.

  • Bankruptcy Ruling Affirms High 9th Circ. Evidentiary Standard

    Author Photo

    The Ninth Circuit Bankruptcy Appellate Panel's recent ruling in Groves demonstrates that Section 363 — which allows a debtor-in-possession to sell their property in order to generate cash — fails as a tool when it’s used to turn a nondebtor entities' property into property of a debtor's bankruptcy estate, says Brian Shaw at Cozen O'Connor.

  • Absent Federal Action, Tribal Cannabis Laws Remain In Limbo

    Author Photo

    Many Native American tribes have proceeded with cannabis legalization efforts despite inconsistent federal enforcement and a confusing jurisdictional landscape, but until the federal government takes action, tribal sovereignty on this issue will remain ad-hoc and uncertain, says Anna Wills at Duane Morris.

  • J&J Ch. 11 Dismissal Ignores Mass Tort Bankruptcy Principles

    Author Photo

    The Third Circuit's recent dismissal of LTL Management's Chapter 11 petition due to insufficient financial distress — even as the Johnson & Johnson subsidiary defends thousands of tort claims — runs contrary to decades of precedent in mass tort bankruptcies, says Douglas Smith at Aurelius Law.

  • Don't Assume AI Is Smart Enough To Avoid Unintended Bias

    Author Photo

    As companies increasingly incorporate artificial intelligence decision models into their business practices, they should consider using statistical and qualitative analyses to evaluate and reduce inadvertent discrimination, or disparate impact, induced by AI, say Christine Polek and Shastri Sandy at The Brattle Group.

  • Circuit Split Complicates US Discovery In Foreign Tribunals

    Author Photo

    Differences between the Second and Fourth Circuits' interpretations of when litigants in foreign tribunals may obtain discovery in U.S. courts are substantial, making companies' decisions about where to file a Section 1782 application complex, say attorneys at Finnegan.

  • State, Federal Disconnect Sows Confusion For CBD Industry

    Author Photo

    The U.S. Food and Drug Administration’s renewed focus on CBD-infused foods, and its recent announcement that it would not develop rules for hemp-derived CBD, exposes a divide between state and federal regulation, resulting in market confusion that will need to be resolved by Congress, say attorneys at the Law Offices of Omar Figueroa.

  • Fielding Remote Work Accommodation Requests Post-COVID

    Author Photo

    The Eighth Circuit's recent decision in Mobley v. St. Luke's may indicate how a court will analyze whether remote work is a reasonable accommodation under the Americans with Disabilities Act in an instance where an employee successfully performed work remotely during the pandemic, providing a road map for employers, says Kenneth Winkler at Berman Fink.

  • Texas' Medical Cannabis Program May Soon Be Sittin' Pretty

    Author Photo

    A number of recently filed bills in Texas signal serious momentum for the state’s anemic medical cannabis program, and though its precise future is still hazy, a robust industry in the Lone Star State would have a profound impact on the national market, say Slates Veazey and Whitt Steineker at Bradley Arant.

  • The Terms Every Monitorship Agreement Should Include

    Author Photo

    Little of the recent discussion around corporate compliance monitorships has focused on how they should be structured, but drafting a clear and comprehensive agreement at the outset is crucial to maximizing a monitorship’s success, says Scott Garland at Affiliated Monitors.

  • Courts Must Apply Correct Causal Standard In Kickback Cases

    Author Photo

    Despite clear statutory language and supporting legislative history, the government and some courts have been incorrectly interpreting the Anti-Kickback Statute's "resulting from" language, which could lead to detrimental effects for innocent patients and physicians if not corrected, say attorneys at Covington.

Can't find the article you're looking for? Click here to search the Healthcare Authority Other archive.