Kentucky doctors are not leaving the state because of medical malpractice suits
Seems my recent post about medical malpractice verdicts in Kentucky got at least one reader stirred up enough to post a comment telling me I was wrong. Well…. I’m not.
Seems my recent post about medical malpractice verdicts in Kentucky got at least one reader stirred up enough to post a comment telling me I was wrong. Well…. I’m not.
This post is about why no one should be surprised that a defendant would refuse to accept responsibility for its actions.
I am tired of uninformed people telling me that we need tort reform in Kentucky to keep good doctors in the state. Too many people wrongly believe that juries are shoveling money at injured patients.
My friend and fellow Kentucky bad faith trial attorney, Austin Mehr obtained a $2.5 million dollar verdict last night in a third-party bad faith claim against the Medical Protective Insurance Company.
I hate mandatory arbitration agreements, especially in healthcare cases. Many supporters point to all sort of supposed “benefits” to arbitration. These benefits are mostly myths…
A senior Arizona state senator is introducing a bill to make a emergency room patient prove medical negligence by a “clear and convincing” standard.
A Texas appellate court has ordered a new trial in a Vioxx case that originally rendered a $7.75 million judgment in favor of the plaintiffs.
State inspectors concluded that Baptist Hospital “failed to assure this patient’s safety.”
Read on to learn what this means for you.