Journal of health law
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Journal of health law · Jan 2005
Will EMTALA changes leave emergency patients dying on the hospital doorstep?
Despite charges that it is at times ambiguous and overly burdensome, the Emergency Medical Treatment and Labor Act (EMTALA) remains an important protection for patients, and a valuable instrument for enforcing public policy goals in the area of emergency healthcare services. The 250 Yard Rule is a small but crucial part of EMTALA, extending the statute's protections to emergency patients who have narrowly failed to reach the hospital's entrance. ⋯ This Article explores the legal and public policy origins of the 250 Yard Rule and their continuing applicability in the current regulatory environment. The Article concludes that the regulatory basis for the 250 Yard Rule remains intact and that the legislative intent behind EMTALA, as well as ongoing public policy goals, dictate that the 250 Yard Rule be preserved.
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Journal of health law · Jan 2005
Understanding the physician-owned specialty hospital phenomenon: the confluence of DRG payment methodology and physician self-referral laws.
Physician-owned specialty hospitals have flourished in today's healthcare arena, but also have been the subject of a great deal of controversy. The author argues that the rise of specialty hospitals has been the result of a confluence of two healthcare policies: (1) skewed DRG payment methodologies and (2) the misapplication of exemptions to the Stark Law's ban on physician self-referral. This Article examines the aspects of these healthcare policies that have allowed for the explosion of specialty hospitals, as well as the arguments for and against the creation and need for specialty hospitals. The Article also analyzes the reform proposals to correct the Stark and DRG methodologies and how those proposals will affect both specialty and general hospitals.