Any of the tort reform laws, which effectively encourage medical malpractice by shielding providers from any meaningful liability for malpractice, would be worthy of such a paper.
You could also look at this from the angle of such laws immunizing insurance companies against loss. Tort reform under the GW Bush administrations has been one of the greatest disasters in the history of US law: in essence, it's legalized corporate robbery.
An alternative would be any of the proposals to allow military assets (equipment, personnel) to be used in actual search, rescue, recovery and other traditional services provided by ambulance services and fire departments.
The catch regarding the latter is that the law has to make clear the military forces can provide civil services only during training and/or proficiency maintenance operations, and only when either (a) there is no competing civil organization able timely to respond or (b) responding civil organizations are overwhelmed.
Such a law would have to specifically prohibit the use of military forces in the performance of traditional police functions, but would need to authorize the use of deadly force in protecting against assault those positions occupied by military forces (self defense).
A proper such law would be somewhat complex, but it could be effectively and ethically written in such a way that it honored traditional legal separations while significantly enhancing the ability to care for the civilian population.
There would be no charge for services provided by military personnel and assets, as they were already paid for through taxes and the budget.
You'd need to make sure neither civilian facilities nor civilian providers could add a charge for the transfer of a person from military care to civilian care, and you'd need to make sure the civilian healthcare system provided full, free and fair access to military providers and patients weren't discriminated against.
2006-12-30 08:00:44
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answer #1
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answered by wireflight 4
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Homework is a soreness interior the ***, in spite of the incontrovertible fact that this is nicely worth it and the end results of not doing it are low grades, low self-nicely worth, hating college, indignant mom and dad, and awkwardness around instructors. the appropriate portion of do is do exactly the homework. do not attempt to think of, "I shouldn't..." or doubt your self - do exactly it! you'll be smart approximately it, do the homework it somewhat is maximum obligatory first, depart the little issues for final, take accepted breaks, no ingesting whilst working as this is distracting, NO television until you're thoroughly carried out.
2016-12-11 19:15:10
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answer #2
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answered by ? 4
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you can do the new HIPPA restrictions, it changed ALL the laws on how doctors share test results etc. there are tons of papers on this online. Plan B is a hot topic now and also has a lot of info online and most of that info focuses on how it is or isin't being made available so that relates to delivery. try web md, new yorker magazine, college library sites, or a search like "Plan B distribution", "HIPPA restrictions and guidelines"
good luck
2006-12-30 07:11:52
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answer #3
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answered by schoolgirl27 2
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http://www.highbeam.com/doc/1G1-101416989.html
2006-12-30 07:09:36
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answer #4
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answered by ryan_n_me2 1
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