Doc’s mistake explodes patient’s eye
July 11, 2011 by Carol Katarsky · Leave a Comment
Filed under: Healthcare Legal & Compliance, In this week's e-newsletter, Latest News & Views
Filed under: Healthcare Legal & Compliance, In this week's e-newsletter, Latest News & Views
We can all agree: Routine cataract surgery shouldn’t begin with an eye being burst from within. The cost in this case: $925k and a patient’s vision. Read more
Yet another hospital pays to settle patient dumping allegations
March 30, 2011 by Carol Katarsky · Leave a Comment
Filed under: Ethics, Healthcare Legal & Compliance, Hospital Management, In this week's e-newsletter, Latest News & Views
Filed under: Ethics, Healthcare Legal & Compliance, Hospital Management, In this week's e-newsletter, Latest News & Views
A Los Angeles-area hospital is paying $125k to settle allegations that it dumped a patient at a homeless shelter. Read more
Doctor aborts wrong twin, blames bad ultrasound
April 19, 2010 by Carol Katarsky · Leave a Comment
Filed under: Ethics, Healthcare Legal & Compliance, In this week's e-newsletter, Latest News & Views, Patient/Client Communication
Filed under: Ethics, Healthcare Legal & Compliance, In this week's e-newsletter, Latest News & Views, Patient/Client Communication
A Florida doctor who “thought” he could safely perform a selective abortion has lost his license to practice. Read more
Settlement agreement in Health Alliance whistleblower suit
February 16, 2010 by Carol Katarsky · Leave a Comment
Filed under: Ethics, Fraud & Waste, Healthcare Finance, Healthcare Legal & Compliance, Hospital Management, In this week's e-newsletter, Insurance, Latest News & Views, Medicare & Medicaid News, Practice Management
Filed under: Ethics, Fraud & Waste, Healthcare Finance, Healthcare Legal & Compliance, Hospital Management, In this week's e-newsletter, Insurance, Latest News & Views, Medicare & Medicaid News, Practice Management
A health system accused of illegally providing kickbacks to favored cardiologists has reached an agreement to settle with the feds. And the cardiologist who first brought the case to light stands to make a mint. Read more
