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- BookJ. Stuart Showalter.Summary: "The Law of Healthcare Administration teaches readers to think through these and other questions of law. Wide-ranging and skillfully written, author Stuart Showalter surveys the pressing issues uncovered during of two centuries of US policy, court decisions, and regulation. Unlike other textbooks on healthcare law, this book emphasizes a practical understanding of legal concepts of interest to students and educators in health administration, public health, nursing, allied health, and related programs. It does so in plain, accessible language, featuring real-life judicial decisions"-- Provided by publisher.
Contents:
A brief history of medicine
Access to healthcare : rights and responsibilities
The organization and management of a corporate healthcare institution
Human resources law
Contracts and intentional torts
Negligence
Liability of the healthcare institution
Medical staff privileges and peer review
Health information management
Emergency care
Consent for treatment and withholding consent
Taxation of healthcare institutions
Competition and Antitrust Law
Issues of reproduction and birth
Fraud laws and corporate compliance.Digital Access R2Library 2020Limited to 1 simultaneous user - ArticleGottesman MM.Proc Natl Acad Sci U S A. 1978 Jun;75(6):2767-71.A protocol has been devised to radiolabel proteins secreted by murine fibroblasts in vitro. A radiolabeled polypeptide of molecular weight 35,000 is released into medium in relatively large amounts by transformed cells and in much smaller amounts by nontransformed fibroblasts. This major excreted polypeptide (MEP) is found in the medium of spontaneously transformed mouse cells and in the medium of mouse cells transformed by a DNA tumor virus, RNA tumor viruses, or methylcholanthrene. The appearance of MEP appears to be well correlated with anchorage independence in these transformed cells. MEP can be localized within the cytoplasm of transformed but not untransformed cells by indirect immunofluorescence. The presence of MEP within murine fibroblasts or in their culture medium serves as a novel biochemical marker of transformation. A biological role for this protein has not been assigned.