Creating Brain-Forward Policies Amid a ‘Mass Deterioration Event’
We know that COVID can affect our brains in ways both serious and subtle. How can our law and policy infrastructure understand and deal with its effects?

We know that COVID can affect our brains in ways both serious and subtle. How can our law and policy infrastructure understand and deal with its effects?
Urgent calls have been made in many quarters to stem the rise in clinical negligence costs borne by England’s National Health Service.
The future of work and of aging will be shaped by struggles over care from both giving and receiving ends, perhaps against those profiting in between.
Now is a pivotal time for the American Medical Association to reconsider its aggressive scope of practice lobbying.
It is important not to forget the patient’s perspective and needs. Tort reform should not focus primarily on economics and cost containment.
Integrating contraindications to potentially scarce interventions into standards of care will help providers in their daily practice.
Today’s pandemic destabilized hospital care because hospitals were neither coordinated nor managed systemically in order to meet population demands.
A new interim final rule requires health insurance plans and issuers on the marketplace to report data on prescription drug and health care spending.