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Vol. 31 No. 1 (1998): Symposium: "Lies, Damn Lies and Statistics: How Empirical Research Shapes Health Law and Policy"
Vol. 31 No. 1 (1998): Symposium: "Lies, Damn Lies and Statistics: How Empirical Research Shapes Health Law and Policy"
Published:
1998-01-01
Front Matter
Front Matter
Indiana Law Review
1-8
PDF
Symposium
Introduction: "Lies, Damn Lies and Statistics: How Empirical Research Shapes Health Law and Policy"
Eleanor D. Kinney, David Orentlicher
9-12
PDF
End-of-Life Decision Making: What We Don't Know, We Make Up; What We Do Know, We Ignore
Sandra H. Johnson
13-48
PDF
Judicial Opinions Involving Health Insurance Coverage: Trompe L'Oeil or Window on the World?
William M. Sage
49-74
PDF
Getting a Handle on Coverage Decisions: If Not Case Law, Then What?
Maxwell J. Mehlman
75-80
PDF
Empirical Studies of Judicial Decisions Serve an Important Role in the Cumulative Process of Policy Making
Karen A. Jordan
81-90
PDF
The Application of Antitrust Doctrine to the Healthcare Industry: The Interweaving of Empirical and Normative Issues
James F. Blumstein
91-118
PDF
Recognition of Health Care Market Anomalies
John C. Render
119-124
PDF
Presumptions, Damn Presumptions and Economic Theory: The Role of Empirical Evidence in Hospital Merger Analysis
Michael S. Jacobs
125-142
PDF
Notes
The State of Copyright Protection for Electronic Databases Beyond ProCD v. Zeidenberg: Are Shrinkwrap Licenses a Viable Alternative for Database Protection?
Jennett M. Hill
143-182
PDF
Seminole Tribe and Superfund: A Federalism Gamble
Barry L. Loftus
183-218
PDF
Will NASCAR Have to Put on the Brakes?: The Constitutionality of the FDA's Ban on Brand-Name Tobacco Sponsorship in Motor Sports
Scott D. Matthews
219-258
PDF
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