Commentary Medical monitoring for pharmaceutical injuries: tort law for the public's health? Citation Text: Studdert DM, Mello MM, Brennan TA. Medical monitoring for pharmaceutical injuries: tort law for the public's health? JAMA. 2003;289(7):889-94. Copy Citation Format: Google ScholarPubMedBibTeXEndNote X3 XMLEndNote 7 XMLEndnote taggedPubMedIdRIS Download Citation Save Save to your library Print Share Facebook Twitter Linkedin Copy URL February 9, 2011 Studdert DM, Mello MM, Brennan TA. JAMA. 2003;289(7):889-94. View more articles from the same authors. PubMed citation Available at Save Save to your library Print Share Facebook Twitter Linkedin Copy URL Cite Citation Citation Text: Studdert DM, Mello MM, Brennan TA. Medical monitoring for pharmaceutical injuries: tort law for the public's health? JAMA. 2003;289(7):889-94. Copy Citation Format: Google ScholarPubMedBibTeXEndNote X3 XMLEndNote 7 XMLEndnote taggedPubMedIdRIS Download Citation Related Resources From the Same Author(s) Claims, errors, and compensation payments in medical malpractice litigation. February 17, 2011 Disclosure of medical injury to patients: an improbable risk management strategy. May 20, 2015 Defensive medicine among high-risk specialist physicians in a volatile malpractice environment. February 3, 2011 Who pays for medical errors? An analysis of adverse event costs, the medical liability system, and incentives for patient safety improvement. February 4, 2015 Beyond negligence: avoidability and medical injury compensation. January 4, 2012 "Health courts" and accountability for patient safety. April 21, 2015 Advising patients about patient safety: current initiatives risk shifting responsibility. January 2, 2017 Fostering rational regulation of patient safety. June 23, 2009 The role of medical liability reform in federal health care reform. January 30, 2017 Patient safety and medical malpractice: a case study. March 2, 2011 View More Related Resources Structural racism in behavioral health presentation and management. May 17, 2023 An infrastructure to provide safer, higher quality, and more equitable telehealth. March 1, 2023 Medication mix-up: what happened at Vanderbilt and how it impacts health care providers. February 15, 2023 The prosecution of RaDonda Vaught: an ethical and legal mistake. December 21, 2022 Made whole: the efficacy of legal redress for black women who have suffered injuries from medical bias. November 30, 2022 Medical error and vulnerable communities. November 16, 2022 A new category of "never events"-ending harmful hospital policies. November 9, 2022 The Lancet Commission on lessons for the future from the COVID-19 pandemic. October 12, 2022 Hospital image repair strategies, organizational apology, and medical errors: an analysis of the CoxHealth brain over-radiation case. September 18, 2019 Surgical data recording technology: a solution to address medical errors? September 18, 2019 View More See More About The Topic Policy Makers Legal and Policy Approaches
Defensive medicine among high-risk specialist physicians in a volatile malpractice environment. February 3, 2011
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Advising patients about patient safety: current initiatives risk shifting responsibility. January 2, 2017
Medication mix-up: what happened at Vanderbilt and how it impacts health care providers. February 15, 2023
Made whole: the efficacy of legal redress for black women who have suffered injuries from medical bias. November 30, 2022
Hospital image repair strategies, organizational apology, and medical errors: an analysis of the CoxHealth brain over-radiation case. September 18, 2019