Category Archives: Medical System Comparision

Claudia Johnson blogs on “Legal Services Policy Research and the Elephant in the Room”

In reading this blog and the American Bar Foundation in Access to Justice, recent report, and other literature, including health policy analysis, I think that as we call for more research about legal services, we need to be clear about … Continue reading

Posted in Medical System Comparision, Research and Evalation, Systematic Change | 1 Comment

Ten-fold Increase in Usage of Retail Health Clinics in Two Years — Implications for Legal Delivery

Is this the future of legal  help too?  A tenfold increase in visits to retail store based health clinics in just two years, as reported by the Washington Post, based on a recent RAND study.  The data is based on … Continue reading

Posted in Medical System Comparision, Mixed Model, Systematic Change | Tagged | 1 Comment

A Revolutionary Idea — Calculating Legal Aid Grants Based on Customer Satisfaction

The NY Times has a fascinating article about how Medicare reimbursement for hospitals is going to be in part calculated on patient satisfaction.  As explained in this government factsheet, this is part of a broader initiative to incentivize a range … Continue reading

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Language Services — Medical Model — Example and General Approach

While the legal system seems to be having difficulty moving forward with language access, here is a nice Oakland Tribune article that talks about creative use of video technology to ensure translation in a hospital. The medical center uses video … Continue reading

Posted in Access to Justice Generally, LEP, Medical System Comparision | Comments Off on Language Services — Medical Model — Example and General Approach

Might This be an Opportunity to Get Legal Information into Health Centers?

HHS Announces: HHS and The Office of the National Coordinator for Health Information Technology introduce new Investing in Innovations (i2) Initiative Could we use this initiative as a way to get medical legal information into public health clinics, hospital waiting … Continue reading

Posted in Libraries, Medical System Comparision, Technology | Tagged | 1 Comment

Study of Broad Benefits of Health Insurance for Poor

Thursday’s NYT has a very important article on the broad benefits of Medicaid for the poor. What happened was this.  Oregon had some spare Medicaid money, but it was only enough for 10,000 people.  So they allocated the slots at … Continue reading

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We Are Visitors in Litigants’ Lives — More on Medical Analagies

I have to share an extract from Dr. Bach’s final NYT article about his wife’s cancer.  His reflections about how the experience of him and his wife, Ruth, with their cancer has changed his own behavior should challenge all of … Continue reading

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Reflective Response on Thinking About Client’s Feelings — Suggestions for Progrms and Funders to Address Issues

I am posting a response (with permission to do so without attribution) to the recent blog about thinking about litigants’ emotions. Thanks for raising this. I think that a lot of a lawyer’s inability to deal with emotions starts in … Continue reading

Posted in Judicial Ethics, Law Schools, Legal Aid, Medical System Comparision, Self-Help Services | Comments Off on Reflective Response on Thinking About Client’s Feelings — Suggestions for Progrms and Funders to Address Issues

Beautiful NYT article by Doctor on Thinking About Patient Experience — Lessons for Lawyers, Court Staff and Judges

Peter Bach, MD, in the NYT today, writes about how, as a cancer doctor married to a woman who gets breast cancer, he sits next to her as her doctor does just what he has done so many times before, … Continue reading

Posted in Judicial Ethics, Medical System Comparision, Self-Help Services | 1 Comment

Impact on Outcomes of Participation by Interns/Residents in Surgery — Thinking About Students in Access Services

Fascinating NYT piece about research into whether having doctors in training — interns or residents — participate in surgery impacts outcomes.  This is a big study and the results paint just the kind of complicated picture that gets you thinking. … Continue reading

Posted in Law Schools, Medical System Comparision, Pro Bono, Research and Evalation | Tagged | 1 Comment