Title: Introduction to Health Care Law
1Introduction to Health Care Law
- Professor Edward P. RichardsLSU Law
Centerhttp//biotech.law.lsu.edu/
2Key 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
3Critical Dates in Medicine
41400s
- Birth of Hospitals
- Places where nuns took care of the dying
- No medical care against the Churchs teachings
- No sanitation assured you would die
5Early 16th Century
- Paracelsus
- Transition From Alchemy
6Mid 16th Century
- Andreas Vesalius
- Accurate Anatomy
7Early 17th Century
- William Harvey
- Blood Circulation the body is dynamic, not
static
81800
- Edward Jenner
- Smallpox and the notion of vaccination
91846
- William Morton - Ether Anesthesia
101849
- Semmelweis
- Childbed Fever and sanitation
- Controlled Studies
111854
- John Snow
- Proved Cholera Is Waterborne
- Basis of the public sanitation movement
121860-1880s
- Louis Pasteur
- Scientific Method
- Simple Germ Theory
- Vaccination For Rabies
- Pasteurization to kill bacteria in milk
131867-1880
- Joseph Lister
- Antisepsis surgeons should wash their hands and
everything else, then use disinfectants - Listerine
141880s
- Koch
- Modern Germ Theory
- Organic Chemistry
- Birth of the modern drug business
- The real starting point for scientific medicine
151850s - 1900s
- Sanitation Movement - Modern Public Health
16Schools 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
17Most 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
18Legal 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
19Transition to Modern Medicine and Surgery
20The Business of Medicine
- Mid to Late 1800s
- Physicians are Solo Practitioners
- Most Make Little Money
- Have Limited Respect
21Surgery Starts to Work in the 1880s
- Surgery Can Be Precise - Anesthesia
- Patients Do Not Get Infected - Antisepsis
22Effect 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
23The 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.
24Bars 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
25Physician Practices
- Shaped by Corporate Practice Laws
- Sole Proprietorships
- Partnerships
- Mostly Small
- Some Large Groups
- First Organized As Partnerships
- Then As Professional Corporations
26Impact 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 Companys Rules
- Physicians Can Be As Ruthless As Anyone
27Evolution of Hospital Administration
28From 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
29Post WW II Technology
- Ventilators (Polio)
- Electronic Monitors
- Intensive Care
- Hospitals Shift From Hotel Services to Technology
Oriented Nursing
30Post World War II Medicine
- Conquering Microbial Diseases
- Vaccines
- Antibiotics
- Chronic Diseases
- Better Drugs
- Better Studies
- Childhood Leukemia
31Hospital Liability - Old Days
- Charitable Immunity
- No professional services
- Physicians provided or supervised professional
services - No Independent Liability for Nurses
- No Liability for Physician malpractice
32Reformation 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
33After Professionalization
- Demise of Charitable Immunity
- Liability for Nursing Staff
- Negligent Selection and Retention Liability for
Medical Staff
34Hospital 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
35Joint 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
36Contemporary 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
37Medical 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
38Hospital 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
39Specialty 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
40Bottom-Line
- Health care is an industry in transition
- Key Problems
- Access
- Cost
- Distributive justice
- Quality