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July 30, 2006
Liability reform and the medically uninsured
At Empirical Legal Studies blog, Bill Henderson summarized (scroll to third entry) an unfortunately linkless paper on the subject presented at the ALEA [American Law and Economics Association] conference: Ronen Avraham & Max Schanzenbach, "An Empirical Study of the Impact of Tort Reforms on Health Insurance Coverage," which was a very clever time-series analysis that showed a relation between tort reform legislation and higher rates of insurance coverage (i.e. fewer uninsured). Although the effect is not large, it does corroborate the idea that fewer successful lawsuits = less defensive medicine = lower insurance costs = more people with insurance.
Posted by Walter Olson at 12:11 AM
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Medicine and Law Statistics/Empirical Work
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