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Int J Technol Assess Health Care · Jan 1998
Historical ArticleMedical malpractice in twentieth century United States. The interaction of technology, law and culture.
- K De Ville.
- East Carolina School of Medicine, USA.
- Int J Technol Assess Health Care. 1998 Jan 1;14(2):197-211.
AbstractAlthough medical malpractice litigation in the United States has generated extensive professional and scholarly attention, few analyses of the issue have explored its underlying causes. This essay develops and employs an historical framework to explain the late 20th century phenomenon and concludes that widespread medical malpractice suits are the result of a combination of short-term topical causes and long-term cultural changes that are ignored or left untouched by most reform efforts. Most importantly, however, the development and proliferation of new and improved medical technologies has played a pivotal role throughout the entire history of the litigation, an effect that has become most prominent and important in the last third of the 20th century.
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