Publications list
Journal article
The Viral Spread of Health Care Financialization: Big Finance, Big Data, and Big Law
Published Jul 2025
American Journal of Law & Medicine , 51, 2, 352 - 375
This reflection article examines the trajectory of health law — using scholarly work by George Annas, Wendy Mariner, and Fran Miller as a platform.1 These three health law scholars have been analyzing the complications of health law in the U.S. economy for decades, and each of them has been prescient in anticipating what the future of health care delivery will look like and how we might improve it.
Journal article
The Role of the Lawyer as Deal Maker in Health Care Acquisitions: From Amoral to Immoral?
Published 2024
The Journal of law, medicine & ethics, 52, 2, 333 - 349
This article proposes ethical - and legal - accountability for lawyers representing clients such as private equity (PE) firms who create ownership structures for nursing home systems. Using PE ownership as a case study, I will show that nursing home residents are often harmed and Medicaid costs inflated. I propose private law provides tools to compel such accountability, through (1) aiding and abetting doctrines and (2) fiduciary doctrines that require that the fiduciary be responsible for its vulnerable beneficiaries, not just ethically but for damages and equitable relief. I further propose that the teaching of Professional Responsibility needs to be changed to force law students to consider the effect of legal practice on third parties in situations like health care financing.
Journal article
The Future of Behavioral Health: Can Private Equity and Telehealth Improve Access?
Published Jul 2023
American journal of law & medicine, 49, 2-3, 314 - 338
Treatment of mental illness in the United States is woefully inadequate. One-third of adults report having a mental health condition or substance use disorder, but less than half receive treatment for their condition.Access is the problem. The U.S. is short on mental health professionals: more psychiatrists are needed and psychologists and social workers are overextended. Proposed solutions are to (1) increase reimbursement rates for psychiatrists and other mental health practitioners, and (2) use a wider range of providers, including nurses and family support specialists-all good ideas. My focus however is on two other forces that are moving into the behavioral health area, offering both financing and technologies to extend the reach of mental health services-private equity and telemental health.First, private equity firms see high demand in this market. Behavioral health is desperately needed but is highly fragmented and lacking in innovation. Private equity is attracted to outpatient programs that target specific conditions that have evidence-based clinical models-programs aimed at addiction, eating disorders, and autism; these areas require less capital. Federal and state reimbursement is available, some regulations have been relaxed to allow remote prescribing of medicine; and innovative telehealth tools can be used. The problem is that private equity has a poor track record in both nursing home care and behavioral care for teens. The private equity model and its financial incentives are at odds with good care.Second, telemental health tools, already in use because of the need during the pandemic, appear attractive. These tools require less capital to treat a higher volume of patients and promise much improved access to mental health treatment for populations that could not get such care because of travel distance, costs, and time limitations. The problem is that the telemental health tools have yet to be subjected to evidence-based testing.My goal in this article is to test whether these two developments - private equity and telemental health -can improve access for patients at an acceptable level of quality. I conclude that both have substantial problems and I offer a range of regulatory approaches to control patient abuses and poor quality.
Preprint
Posted to a preprint site 2023
SSRN Electronic Journal
Book chapter
Medical Liability: Comparing Compensation Systems
Published 29 Jul 2021
The Oxford Handbook of Comparative Health Law
This chapter presents a comparison of liability/compensation systems across countries, which can be challenging because of substantial differences in tort doctrine, judicial systems, and administrative compensation mechanisms. It approaches the problem of patient injury in a healthcare system from the dual (and dueling) perspectives of system responsibility and provider culpability. The basic question that the chapter asks is this: Who should bear the economic costs of medical adverse events? The US system remains solidly anchored in the tort liability system, with its emphasis on negligence-based culpability in medical malpractice cases—but with timid moves toward enterprise liability and statutory communication and resolution programs. By contrast, the Scandinavian systems have publicly funded patient compensation funds.
Journal article
Published May 2020
American journal of law & medicine, 46, 2-3, 219 - 235
Book
Published 2020
West Academic study aids online.
Book chapter
Smashing into Windows: The Limits of Consumer Sovereignty in Health Care
Published 06 Jun 2019
Transparency in Health and Health Care in the United States
Book
Law and health care quality, patient safety, and liability
Published 2018
Journal article
Published Jun 2017
Journal of bioethical inquiry, 14, 2, 167 - 172