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Medical Care Research and Review
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Managed Care Litigation: Legal Doctrine at the Boundary of Tort and Contract

Peter D. Jacobson

University of Michigan

Neena M. Patil

Bond, Schoeneck, & King, LLP

This article summarizes the various approaches to how the law should assign responsibility in a system where health care financing and delivery are combined. Health law scholars have been debating whether conflicts in managed care between individual patient needs and preserving assets for the patient population should be resolved by tort or contract law. Until recently, the literature has been dominated by scholars arguing that managed care should be guided by contractual arrangements and concepts to stimulate the market changes occurring in health care delivery. We summarize the arguments for and against both contract and tort, along with recent attempts to bridge the gap between the two approaches. The case in favor of a contract regime fails to account for the hybrid nature of managed care delivery and the context in which managed care litigation arises. Thus, tort law retains a fundamental monitoring role in the managed care era.

Medical Care Research and Review, Vol. 57, No. 4, 440-463 (2000)
DOI: 10.1177/107755870005700403


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Home page
Journal of Health Politics, Policy and LawHome page
P. D. Jacobson and M. L. Kanna
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[Abstract] [PDF]