NEWSROOM2022-09-18T06:59:42-04:00

NJLRA’s Testimony in support of A-1982

For many aspiring medical students at New Jersey’s institutions, the dream of practicing specialized medicine faces significant financial hurdles.  In addition to a high cost of living and student loans, young doctors must also be prepared to absorb the cost of malpractice insurance premiums.  And specialties which carry the highest premiums tend to disproportionately impact women, as New Jersey’s OBGYNs face some of the highest rates in the nation.  NJLRA spoke to one such casualty of the system a few months back, a medical student who had invested well over one hundred thousand dollars into his education and had lived in New Jersey his entire life.   He sadly realized that he would not be able to afford to practice obstetrics – his lifelong dream – unless he did so in another state with lower premiums. 

And the worst lawsuit of 2012 is…

Carteret resident Ellen Shane’s “Thanks for saving my life.  That’ll cost you $5 million” lawsuit.     When Carteret resident [...]

Statement from Women’s Legislative Caucus on Hearing into Women’s Healthcare Disparities

(TRENTON) –  The co-chairs of the bipartisan, bicameral Women’s Legislative Caucus today issued the following statement after more than three hours of illuminating testimony into the growing lack of access to women’s healthcare services and the possible contributing factors:

“The information we found out today was disturbing, enlightening, and most importantly, a call to action.  Within the next 10 years, New Jersey will be facing an alarming shortage of physicians, particularly in fields such as obstetrics, gynecology and pediatrics, which disproportionately impact women and their families.

Assembly Committee to hear Medical Malpractice Reform Legislation on Thursday, June 10th 2010

A-1982 concerns liability, standards of care, and insurance coverage for medical malpractice actions.  Among other things, A-1982 would: 

  • Require that a provider had a relationship with a patient filing suit;
  • Prevent insurance carriers from raising malpractice premiums based on a claim of medical malpractice, unless the physician is found liable in court;
  • Require that physicians and healthcare professionals providing "expert testimony" be licensed in New Jersey;
  • Narrow the window for filing suit to not more than four years after the date of the alleged incident occurred; and
  • Protect volunteer physicians acting in good faith from civil liability.

A-1982 will be posted for discussion only, so be sure to tell your legislators to support A-1982/S-760.

Study finds New Jersey a tough place for defendants

SAN FRANCISCO (Legal Newsline) - New Jersey and New York are the two states with the highest combination of tort costs and risk, according to a study published by free-market think tank Pacific Research Institute.

Chathams schools sue attorney, allege malpractice

CHATHAM -- The School District of the Chathams is suing its former attorneys for malpractice, alleging the firm cost the schools in excess of $1.5 million when it mishandled a 2005 dispute with a contractor.

According to a lawsuit filed last week in Superior Court in Morris County, Attorney Nuris E. Portuondo with the Morristown-based law firm of Schwartz, Simon, Edelstein, Celso & Zitomer failed to file documents on time that would have tipped the lawsuit in the district’s favor.

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