Introduction to Health Care Law
Professor Edward P. Richards
LSU Law Center
http://biotech.law.lsu.edu/
Key Issues
Scientific medicine is about 120 years old
Technology based medicine is less than 60 years old
Doctors are not scientists and many do not practice
scientific medicine.
There is no stable model for medical businesses, leading
to constant change and unending legal problems.
Health care finance shapes medical care and is a huge
mess
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Critical Dates in Medicine
1400s
Birth of Hospitals
Places where nuns took care of the dying
No medical care – against the Church’s teachings
No sanitation – assured you would die
4
Early 16th Century
Paracelsus
Transition From Alchemy
5
Mid 16th Century
Andreas Vesalius
Accurate Anatomy
6
Early 17th Century
William Harvey
Blood Circulation – the body is dynamic, not static
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1800
Edward Jenner
Smallpox and the notion of vaccination
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1846
William Morton - Ether Anesthesia
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1849
Semmelweis
Childbed Fever and sanitation
Controlled Studies
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1854
John Snow
Proved Cholera Is Waterborne
Basis of the public sanitation movement
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1860-1880s
Louis Pasteur
Scientific Method
Simple Germ Theory
Vaccination For Rabies
Pasteurization to kill bacteria in milk
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1867-1880
Joseph Lister
Antisepsis – surgeons should wash their hands
and everything else, then use disinfectants
Listerine
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1880s
Koch
Modern Germ Theory
Organic Chemistry
Birth of the modern drug business
The real starting point for scientific medicine
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1850s - 1900s
Sanitation Movement - Modern Public Health
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Schools of Practice - Pre-Science (1800s)
Allopathy
Opposite Actions
Toxic and Nasty
Homeopathy
Same Action as the Disease Symptoms
Tiny Doses
Less Dangerous
Naturopaths, Chiropractors, Osteopaths, and Several
Other Schools
16
Most Medical Schools are Diploma Mills
No Bar to Entry to Profession
Small Number of Urban Physicians are Rich
Most Physicians are Poor
Cannot Make Capital Investments
Training
Medical Equipment and Staff
Physicians Push for State Regulation to create a
monopoly
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Legal Consequences
No Testimony Across Schools of Practice
Different from Medical Specialties
Surgery, Internal Medicine, Pediatrics
All Same School of Practice - Allopathy
All Same License
Cross-Specialty Testimony Allowed
Still important with the rise of alternative/quack medicine
18
Transition to Modern Medicine and
Surgery
The Business of Medicine
Mid to Late 1800s
Physicians are Solo Practitioners
Most Make Little Money
Have Limited Respect
20
Surgery Starts to Work in the 1880s
Surgery Can Be Precise - Anesthesia
Patients Do Not Get Infected - Antisepsis
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Effect on Licensing and Education
Once there are objective differences (people live)
between qualified and unqualified docs, people care
You can make more money with better training
You can make more money with better equipment and
facilities
Effective Medicine Drives Licensing
Licensing Limits Competition
Physicians Start to Make Money
22
The Tipping Point
About 1910, going to the doctor, and
particularly the hospital, shifted from
being more dangerous than avoiding
them to increasing your chance of
survival.
Bars on Corporate Practice of Medicine 1920s
Physicians Working for Non-physicians
Concerns About Professional Judgment
Cases From 1920 Read Like the Headlines
Banned In Most States
Real Concern Was Laymen Making Money off
Physicians
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Physician Practices
Shaped by Corporate Practice Laws
Sole Proprietorships
Partnerships
Mostly Small
Some Large Groups
First Organized As Partnerships
Then As Professional Corporations
25
Impact of Corporate Bans on Institutional
Practice
Physicians Do Not Work for Non-Governmental Hospitals
Contracts Governed by Medical Staff Bylaws
Sham of “Buying” Practices
Physicians Contract With Most Institutions
Charade of Captive Physician Groups
Managed Care Companies Contact With Group
Group Enforces Managed Care Company’s Rules
Physicians Can Be As Ruthless As Anyone
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Evolution of Hospital Administration
From Nuns to MBAs
From Hotel to High Tech - The Evolution of
Hospitals
Started With Surgery
Medical Laboratories
Bacteriology
Microanatomy
Radiology
Services and Sanitation Attract Patients
Internal Medicine
Obstetrics Patients
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Post WW II Technology
Ventilators (Polio)
Electronic Monitors
Intensive Care
Hospitals Shift From Hotel Services to Technology
Oriented Nursing
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Post World War II Medicine
Conquering Microbial Diseases
Vaccines
Antibiotics
Chronic Diseases
Better Drugs
Better Studies
Childhood Leukemia
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Hospital Liability - Old Days
Charitable Immunity
No professional services
Physicians provided or supervised professional services
No Independent Liability for Nurses
No Liability for Physician malpractice
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Reformation of Hospitals
Paralleled Changes in the Medical Profession
Began in the 1880s
Shift From Religious to Secular
Began in the Midwest and West
Not As Many Established Religious Hospitals
Today, Religious Orders Still Control A Majority of
Hospitals
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After Professionalization
Demise of Charitable Immunity
Liability for Nursing Staff
Negligent Selection and Retention Liability for Medical
Staff
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Hospital Staff Privileges
Physicians are Independent Contractors
Hospitals Are Not Vicariously Liable for
Independent Contractor Physicians
Hospitals Are Liable for Negligent Credentialing
and Negligent Retention
Hospitals Can Be Liable if the Physician is an
Ostensible Agent
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Joint Commission on Accreditation of
Hospitals
1950s
Now Joint Commission on Accreditation of
Health Care Organizations
American College of Surgeons and
American Hospital Association
Split The Power In Hospitals
Medical Staff Controls Medical Staff
Administrators Control Everything Else
Enforced By Accreditation
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Contemporary Hospital Organization
Classic Corporate Organizations
CEO
Board of Trustees Has Final Authority
Part of Conglomerate
Medical Staff Committees
Tied To Corporation by Bylaws
Headed by Medical Director
Constant Conflict of Interest/Antitrust Issues
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Medical Staff Bylaws
Contract Between Physicians and Hospital
Not Like the Bylaws of a Business
Selection Criteria
Contractual Due Process For Termination
Negotiated Between Medical Staff and Hospital
Board
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Hospital Economics
Old Days
More Patients Meant More Money
More Docs to Admit Patients
Insurance Was So Generous It Cross-subsidized
Indigent Care
Now
Hospital beds are being closed to save money
DRGS- Insurance and Government Pay is Very Limited
- No Cross-Subsidy
Under-Insured or Over-Cared-For Patients Cost Money
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Specialty Hospitals
Complex care is safer when regionalized
Specialty hospitals can provide better care at
lower prices
Do not need to provide money losing services
Do not take uninsured patients
Shift the most valuable patients from community
hospitals
Dramatically increase unnecessary surgery
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Bottom-Line
Health care is an industry in transition
Key Problems
Access
Cost
Distributive justice
Quality
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