See generally, U.S. Congress, Office of Technology Assessment, Impact of Legal Reforms on Medical Malpractice Costs (Washington D.C.: U.S. Government Printing Office, Sept. 1993).
2.
SloanFrank A., Suing for Medical Malpractice (Chicago: University of Chicago Press, 1993), p. 23.
3.
Id., p. 20.
4.
JohnsonWilliam J., “The Economic Consequences of Medical Injuries,”JAMA, 267 (1992): 2487–92.
5.
Sloan, supra note 2, p. 36.
6.
Id., pp. 56–57.
7.
MayMarylynneStengalDaniel B., “Who Sues Their Doctors? How Patients Handle Medical Grievances,”Law and Society Review, 24 (1990): 105–21.
8.
Sloan, supra note 2, p. 89.
9.
FowlerHenry S.WhiteMichelle J., “A Comparison of Formal and Informal Dispute Resolution in Medical Malpractice,”Journal of Legal Studies, 23 (1994): 777.
10.
TaraginM.I., “Does Physician Performance Explain Interspecialty Differences in Malpractice Claims Rates?,”Medical Care, 32 (1994):661–67.
11.
BurstinHelen R.LipsitzStuart R.BrennanTroyen A., “Do the Poor Sue More? A Case-Control Study of Malpractice Claims and Socioeconomic Status,”JAMA, 270 (1993): 1697–701.