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Med-Mal Mediation Offers Promise, but Systemic Obstacles Remain - Chapter 61 - AAA Handbook on Mediation - 2nd Edition

 
Price:
$35.00
Author: Amy G. London
Page Count: 8
Published: September 2010
Media Desc: PDF from "AAA Handbook on Mediation - 2nd Edition"
File Size: 105 KB
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Description

Originally from: 

AAA Handbook on Mediation - 2nd Edition - Electronic

AAA Handbook on Mediation - 2nd Edition - Hardcover


 

CHAPTER 61 - Preview Page

MED-MAL MEDIATION OFFERS PROMISE BUT SYSTEMIC OBSTACLES REMAIN
Amy G. London
 

I. Introduction

As a seasoned litigator, I am rarely at a loss for words. Court reporters often chastise me for rattling off deposition questions too rapidly; judges occasionally glare at me when I fail to wait patiently for my adversary to finish speaking before I chime in with my point of view. Yet there I was, facing my opponents in mediation—a far less pressured setting—unsure of what to say. There was no court reporter recording each word, and no judge trying to speed the participants along to get to the end of a long court calendar. Instead, the proceedings were led by two soft-spoken attorneys (yes, there are a few of those out there) who suggested that we all address each other by first names. They explained that they simply wanted to “facilitate” (a new term in my litigator’s lexicon) a free discussion of our concerns, which might lead to consideration, in part, of “non-monetary remedies” for our dispute.
 
After over 20 years of defending lawsuits brought against the City of New York and other municipal agencies—most of my career has been devoted to medical malpractice cases involving public hospitals like Bellevue—I was participating in my first mediation. This came about when I was given the opportunity to take part in a pilot program run under the auspices of Columbia University Law School, in which a...

 

Table of Contents
Full TABLE OF CONTENTS from "AAA Handbook on Mediation - 2nd Edition"

 
Foreword
 
 
James R. Holbrook
 
Douglas E. Noll
 
Cris M. Currie
 
Ira B. Lobel
 
Mark R. Sherman
 
Steven L. Schwartz
 
Gerald F. Phillips
 
David L. Erickson and Peter Geoffrey Bowen
 
Amy L. Lieberman
 
Roger J. Peters and Deborah Bovarnick Mastin
 
 
Peter J. Comodeca
 
Bruce A. Blitman
 
Joel E. Davidson
 
Howard D. Venzie, Jr.
 
Jordi Agustí-Panareda
 
John Patrick Dolan
Bennett G. Picker
 
Gerald F. Phillips
 
Judith B. Ittig
 
Donald R. Philbin, Jr.
 
William A. Blancato and C. Allen Gibson, Jr.
 
 
Robert S. Peckar
 
Fred D. Butler
 
Cris M. Currie
 
Lee A. Rosengard
 
Kevin W. Cruthirds
 
Mercédeh Azeredo da Silveira
 
Judith P. Meyer and Irena Vanekova
 
 
Nancy Kauffman and Barbara Davis
 
Gerald S. Clay and James K. Hoenig
 
Dwight Golann and Marjorie Corman Aaron
 
James E. McGuire
 
Donna M. Stringer and Lonnie Lusardo
 
Richard P. Flake
 
John M. Livingood
 
Charles B. Craver
 
Bruce A. Blitman and Jeanne Maes
 
Evan Slavitt
 
Robbie Mac Pherson
 
Jeffrey L. McClellan
 
James R. Madison
 
 
Karin S. Hobbs
 
David Grappo
 
L. Randolph Lowry
 
L. Therese White and Bill White
 
Roger M. Deitz
 
Mori Irvine
 
Harold I. Abramson
 
Jeffrey Krivis
 
Robert W. Hassold, Jr.
 
Kent B. Scott and Cody W. Wilson
 
 
Dennis Sharp
 
Mattox Hair, Sharon Press and Brooks Rathet
 
Paul M. Lurie and Jeremy S. Baker
 
 
Donald Lee Rome
 
Elissa Tonkin
 
Donald Lee Rome
 
Robert A. Harris
 
Lynn Sylvester and Ira B. Lobel
 
Robert S. Peckar
 
Amy G. London
 
Albert Bates, Jr. and L. Tyrone Holt
 
Vivian Berger
 
 
Jay W. Stein
 
Jeffrey Krivis
 
Bruce E. Meyerson
 
David J. McLean and Sean-Patrick Wilson
 
Index
Author Detail

Amy G. London graduated from Brown University (1980) and the University of Pennsylvania Law School (1983). She has worked in the Tort Division of the New York City Law Department since graduating from law school, currently holding the position of Senior Counsel in the Medical Malpractice Unit. She has also served as a Continuing Legal Education instructor on the topic of defending cases brought against Emergency Medical Services.