PJC Business 2024
A PPENDIX
PJC 51.6 PJC 51.7 PJC 51.8 PJC 51.9
Proportionate Responsibility—Medical—Derivative Claimant
Abandonment of Patient by Physician Res Ipsa Loquitur—Medical (Comment)
Informed Consent (Common Law) PJC 51.10 Informed Consent (Statutory)—Procedure Not on List A or B—No Emergency or Other Medically Feasible Reason for Nondisclosure—Disclosure in Issue PJC 51.11 Informed Consent (Statutory)—Procedure on List A—No Emergency or Other Medically Feasible Reason for Nondisclosure—No Disclosure PJC 51.12 Informed Consent (Statutory)—Procedure on List A—No Emergency or Other Medically Feasible Reason for Nondisclosure—Disclosure Not in Statutory Form PJC 51.13 Informed Consent (Statutory)—Procedure on List A—No Disclosure—Emergency or Other Medically Feasible Reason for Nondisclosure in Issue PJC 51.14 Informed Consent (Statutory)—Procedure on List A— Validity of Disclosure Instrument in Issue PJC 51.15 Battery—Medical PJC 51.16 Express Warranty—Medical PJC 51.17 Implied Warranty—Medical (Comment) PJC 51.18 Emergency Care and Emergency Medical Care PJC 51.19 Malicious Credentialing Claim against a Hospital PJC 51.20 The Emergency Medical Treatment and Active Labor Act (EMTALA)—Medical Screening Examinations and/or Stabilization before Transfer When a Patient Comes to a Hospital with an Emergency Medical Condition PJC 51.21 Liability of Physicians, Health Care Providers, and First Responders During Pandemic (Comment)
C HAPTER 52
M EDICAL M ALPRACTICE —T HEORIES OF V ICARIOUS L IABILITY Borrowed Employee—Medical—Liability of Borrowing Employer
PJC 52.1
588
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