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| Course | Law and Medical Litigation - Law 654B | ||
| Instructor | Roy G. Spece View Faculty Page | ||
| spece@law.arizona.edu | |||
| Units | 3 - Graded | ||
| Prerequisites: | None |
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| Recommended Courses: | None |
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| Overview | This course examines personal injury litigation against health care providers (physicians, nurses, hospitals and HMO’s, to name a few). Most law students are familiar with the basic concepts of personal injury litigation, at least of the “red car hits blue car” genre. Medical liability litigation introduces many complexities, including, but in no way limited to, challenging nuances concerning extraordinary procedural requirements, financing cases, obtaining and qualifying experts, adducing and presenting scientific evidence, the standard of care, causation, damages, joint and vicarious liability, product liability and tort reform. The course will be both practical and theoretical. In addition to readings in a traditional casebook, students will study the basic steps of a medical liability case from the client interview through accepting a case, doing discovery and pretrial work, trial and appeal. Documents will be available if the student wishes to build a “form file” for future use. Examination of the various stages of medical liability litigation and the textbook material will both entail consideration of underlying strategic, policy and jurisprudential issues. The course is good preparation for any type of relatively complex litigation. |
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| Materials | Medical Liability and Treatment Relationships (M. Hall & M. Bobinski, et al., (newest edition)
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| Course Format | Lecture and discussion |
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| Written Assignments | None |
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| Type of Exam | The student can choose to take a final examination or to write a paper. If the paper option is chosen, the student can have no more than three absences. |
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| Basis for grading | Examination or paper. A borderline grade can be raised for quality class participation. |
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