Health

  • January 06, 2025

    Medical Debt Suit Against Credit Bureaus Tossed, For Now

    A California federal judge tossed a proposed class action accusing Equifax, Experian and TransUnion of violating antitrust law by agreeing to exclude medical debt under $500 from consumer credit reports, but the judge gave the medical providers that filed the suit a chance to amend their complaint.

  • January 06, 2025

    USAA Hits Mich. Clinics, Owners With Billing Fraud Claims

    United Services Automobile Association has told a Michigan federal court that physical therapy providers worked together to defraud the insurer by soliciting car accident victims and then referring them for unnecessary medical care.

  • January 06, 2025

    'Golden Rule' Claim Doesn't Fly In $7M Med Mal Verdict Appeal

    A Pennsylvania appeals court affirmed a $7 million verdict in a suit accusing healthcare providers of failing to diagnose a man's rectal cancer, rejecting Monday the notion that the plaintiffs' counsel improperly invoked the "Golden Rule" by asking the jury to address a systemic failure.

  • January 06, 2025

    'Iron Man 2' Actor Sentenced To Over 8 Years For COVID Scam

    A bodybuilder and actor from "Iron Man 2" was sentenced to over eight years in prison by a California federal judge Monday after a jury found he tried to scam investors by claiming he'd found a cure for COVID-19 and that NBA legend Earvin "Magic" Johnson was a major investor.

  • January 06, 2025

    5th Circ. Iffy On Humana, Blue Cross Allergy Meds Denials

    A Fifth Circuit panel seemed poised Monday to side with an allergy services provider accusing insurance giants Blue Cross Blue Shield and Humana of colluding to deny claims and drive the company out of the market.

  • January 06, 2025

    Labcorp Loses Appeal Of Gene-Testing Patent In $372M Case

    Labcorp, one of the world's largest chains of clinical lab providers, lost its appeal over a patent tied to a $372 million judgment it is facing in the Western District of Texas, after Federal Circuit judges on Monday upheld an administrative patent board ruling against it two years ago.

  • January 06, 2025

    DC Judge Denies Atty's Bid To Hasten Search For DEA Leak

    A D.C. federal judge Monday denied a Texas attorney's bid to force the U.S. Drug Enforcement Administration to turn over purported communications between agency personnel and anti-legalization activists regarding a proposal to loosen federal restrictions on marijuana.

  • January 06, 2025

    Judge Rejects Rape Kit Seller's 2nd Bid To Pause Wash. Ban

    A Washington federal judge has denied a request for an injunction pending appeal by a company challenging the state's ban on the sale of "DIY" DNA collection kits for sexual assault survivors, reiterating his prior ruling that the law passes constitutional muster because it regulates conduct and not speech.

  • January 06, 2025

    Ga. Physician Assistant Sues Insurer Over Disability Benefits

    A former physician assistant at Emory Healthcare Inc. filed suit Friday against Unum Life Insurance Co. of America, alleging that the company wrongfully terminated her long-term disability benefits despite her continued suffering from long COVID, which rendered her "unable to sustain almost any level of physical activity."

  • January 06, 2025

    Indian Chemical Cos. Supplied Fentanyl Precursors, DOJ Says

    New York federal prosecutors on Monday unveiled criminal charges against two India-based chemical companies and a senior executive for allegedly conspiring to supply and ship chemical building blocks that would later be made into fentanyl, a highly addictive and deadly synthetic opioid, to the United States and Mexico.

  • January 06, 2025

    Teoxane Outbids Crown With New Revance Therapeutics Bid

    Teoxane SA said Monday it has submitted a proposal to Revance Therapeutics Inc. to acquire the healthcare biotechnology company for $3.60 per share in cash, one-upping Revance's existing agreement to sell itself to skincare company Crown Laboratories Inc. for $3.10 per share in cash. 

  • January 06, 2025

    SEC Seeks To Bar Milbank Probe From Dialysis Execs' Trial

    The U.S. Securities and Exchange Commission said Monday that two dialysis company executives accused of accounting fraud should not be allowed to tell a jury about a Milbank LLP-led internal investigation they say found no evidence of intentional wrongdoing.

  • January 06, 2025

    Outpatient Surgery Co. Strikes $1.5M Deal To End 401(k) Suit

    United Surgical Partners International Inc. will pay about $1.48 million to end a proposed class action alleging the outpatient surgery network loaded its employee 401(k) plan with expensive investment options and excessive fees, according to a filing in Texas federal court.

  • January 06, 2025

    Sheppard Mullin Hires University Of Calif. Health Counsel

    Sheppard Mullin Richter & Hampton LLP announced Monday that it has hired two attorneys who previously served in-house at the University of California to bolster its healthcare industry practice group.

  • January 06, 2025

    Staffing Co. Strikes $4.4M Deal To End Nurses' Wage Suit

    A healthcare staffing agency agreed to pay $4.4 million to resolve a 2,300-member collective action accusing it of shorting travel nurses on overtime wages and forcing them to accept lower pay after they had already begun their contracts, a filing in Washington federal court said.

  • January 06, 2025

    Girard Sharp Launches Into New Year With New Leadership

    San Francisco-based Girard Sharp has kicked off the new year with a major leadership change, announcing Monday that Daniel C. Girard had stepped down as managing partner of the prominent plaintiffs complex litigation boutique he founded in 1995 and that longtime partner Dena C. Sharp was taking the reins.

  • January 03, 2025

    Aetna Says Takeda Inked Deal To Block Generics, Keep Profits

    Takeda Pharmaceuticals struck an anticompetitive deal with Par Pharmaceutical to keep a cheaper, generic version of its anticonstipation drug Amitiza off the market after the drug's compound patent expired, Aetna claimed Friday in a Massachusetts lawsuit, with the insurer alleging it overpaid millions of dollars for the brand name drug.

  • January 03, 2025

    Hospital Org Inks $135M Deal To End Ex-CFO's Fraud Claims

    Community Health Network has agreed to pay $135 million to end federal healthcare fraud claims brought by its former chief financial officer, a deal reached two years after the Indiana healthcare system agreed to pay $345 million to settle False Claims Act allegations from the government in the qui tam action, the ex-CFO's counsel announced Thursday.

  • January 03, 2025

    DOJ Wants Oct. Amedisys Trial, UnitedHealth Wants Aug.

    The U.S. Department of Justice sparred with UnitedHealth Group in a Maryland federal court filing Friday over when to hold a trial on the government challenge to the $3.3 billion purchase of home health and hospice services company Amedisys Inc.

  • January 03, 2025

    Mass. Justices Affirm $29M Award In Leg Amputation Suit

    The top court in Massachusetts on Friday upheld a nearly $29 million payout in a patient's lawsuit that accused two nurses and a physician assistant of causing his leg amputation, saying the details of a settlement agreement with two of the three healthcare professionals was properly excluded at trial.

  • January 03, 2025

    PBMs 'Wasting' Time in Opioid MDL Discovery Spat: Judge

    An Ohio federal judge overseeing multidistrict opioid litigation on Friday denied pharmacy benefit managers a stay to appeal a discovery order and said he believed the PBMs were "wasting" the court's time.

  • January 03, 2025

    Outcome Execs Say Ill. Judge Should End Restitution Process

    Outcome Health's former executives say the Illinois federal judge working to calculate how much they should repay investors following their fraud conviction should end the "largely academic" exercise because prosecutors haven't shown financial loss, and other repayment avenues remain open.

  • January 03, 2025

    Lyft, Home Health Agency Sued Over Fatal Crash

    Lyft, a Massachusetts home healthcare agency and several individuals have been named in a wrongful death suit brought on Friday by the daughters of an elderly woman who died after her rideshare driver sped off a highway and into the front of a closed retail store last May.

  • January 03, 2025

    NY Nursing Home Blames AG's 'Crusade' For Ch. 11

    The owner of a 588-bed nursing facility on Long Island has filed for Chapter 11 protection in a New York bankruptcy court with more than $58 million in debt, saying it was the victim of a "crusade" and "smear campaign" launched by the state attorney general's office.

  • January 03, 2025

    Mich. Justices Asked To Ease Hospital Liability Standard

    A patient has urged the Michigan Supreme Court to clear up the standards for when hospitals can be liable for the mistakes of doctors who treat patients as independent contractors, saying a recent decision by the state's intermediate appellate court added an unwarranted hurdle to holding hospitals responsible.

Expert Analysis

  • How Judiciary Can Minimize AI Risks In Secondary Sources

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    Because courts’ standing orders on generative artificial intelligence and other safeguards do not address the risk of hallucinations in secondary source materials, the judiciary should consider enlisting legal publishers and database hosts to protect against AI-generated inaccuracies, say attorneys at Lankler Siffert & Wohl.

  • Newly Acquired Information Can Be Key In Drug Label Cases

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    The question of whether federal law preempts state law claims is often central in pharmaceutical labeling cases, like the Fosamax litigation now before the Third Circuit — but parties must also consider whether there is newly acquired information to justify submitting a proposed labeling change in the first place, say attorneys at Arnold & Porter.

  • Justices Face Tough Question On HHS Hospital Pay Formula

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    In Advocate Christ Medical Center v. Becerra, the U.S. Supreme Court will determine whether the U.S. Department of Health and Human Services properly applied certain Medicare reimbursement adjustments to hospitals — a decision that could significantly affect hospitals' ability to seek higher Medicare reimbursement for low-income patients, say attorneys at Sheppard Mullin.

  • How Attorneys Can Break Free From Career Enmeshment

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    Ambitious attorneys can sometimes experience career enmeshment — when your sense of self-worth becomes unhealthily tangled up in your legal vocation — but taking the time to discover and realign with your core personal values can help you recover your identity, says Janna Koretz at Azimuth Psychological.

  • Key Healthcare Issues That Hinge On The Election Outcome

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    The 2024 presidential race, while not heavily dominated by healthcare issues compared to past elections, holds significant implications for the direction of healthcare policy in a potential Harris or Trump administration, encompassing issues ranging from Medicare to artificial intelligence, says Miranda Franco at Holland & Knight.

  • Patent Lessons From 4 Federal Circuit Reversals In September

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    Cases that were reversed or vacated by the Federal Circuit last month provide helpful clarity on collateral estoppel, patent eligibility, construction of claim terms that have different boundaries across different claims, and the role of courts as neutral arbiter, say attorneys at Bunsow De Mory.

  • Lawyers With Disabilities Are Seeking Equity, Not Pity

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    Attorneys living with disabilities face extra challenges — including the need for special accommodations, the fear of stigmatization and the risk of being tokenized — but if given equitable opportunities, they can still rise to the top of their field, says Kate Reder Sheikh, a former attorney and legal recruiter at Major Lindsey & Africa.

  • Fostering Healthcare Industry Success With Joint Ventures

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    As the healthcare industry continues to evolve, joint ventures remain a key strategy to unite health systems, private equity firms and physician practices in leveraging their collective strengths to foster innovation and improve patient care, say Carole Becker and Travis Jackson at McDermott.

  • Opinion

    Judicial Committee Best Venue For Litigation Funding Rules

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    The Advisory Committee on Civil Rules' recent decision to consider developing a rule for litigation funding disclosure is a welcome development, ensuring that the result will be the product of a thorough, inclusive and deliberative process that appropriately balances all interests, says Stewart Ackerly at Statera Capital.

  • The Strategic Advantages Of Appointing A Law Firm CEO

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    The impact on law firms of the recent CrowdStrike outage underscores that the business of law is no longer merely about providing supplemental support for legal practice — and helps explain why some law firms are appointing dedicated, full-time CEOs to navigate the challenges of the modern legal landscape, says Jennifer Johnson at Calibrate Strategies.

  • Webuild Ruling Complicates Arb. Award Enforcement In US

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    A Delaware federal court's recent decision in Sociedad Concesionaria Metropolitana de Salud v. Webuild, if read literally, could undercut the United States' image as a proarbitration jurisdiction by complicating creditors' efforts to enforce awards against property in this country, says Jeff Newton at Omni Bridgeway.

  • How 2 Proposed Bills Could Transform Patent Law

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    The Patent Eligibility Restoration Act and the Prevail Act may come up for vote by the Senate Judiciary Committee after the election, and both offer benefits and challenges for inventors and companies seeking to obtain patents, says Philip Nelson at Knobbe Martens.

  • Series

    Beekeeping Makes Me A Better Lawyer

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    The practice of patent law and beekeeping are not typically associated, but taking care of honeybees has enriched my legal practice by highlighting the importance of hands-on experience, continuous learning, mentorship and more, says David Longo at Oblon McClelland.

  • Tobacco Surcharge Suits Spotlight Wellness Reg Compliance

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    A mounting wave of tobacco-user surcharge litigation against employee benefit plans highlights compliance challenges associated with the Health Insurance Portability and Accountability Act wellness regulations, and reminds plan sponsors to ask existential questions about the utility of their wellness programs, say Finn Pressly and Lesley Wolf at Ballard Spahr.

  • The Key To Solving High Drug Costs Is Understanding Causes

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    One-sided views on who or what contributes to the high cost of pharmaceuticals render possible solutions much harder to discover and implement, and a better approach would be to examine history and learn why costs have increased and what legislation has and hasn't helped, says Nancy Linck at NJ Linck Consulting.

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