From Publishers Weekly
Negotiating the maze of health care options is rarely easy, but Swartz and Isaacs explain how and why health care consumers should take their sometimes difficult role seriously. The authors are no strangers to medicine's vagaries: Isaacs is a professor of public health at Columbia University and an attorney who practices health law, while Swartz offers painful firsthand experience: she underwent complications in pregnancy, never diagnosed by her doctor, that finally required an emergency C-section. Together, they review laws and recent court decisions and give advice on how to get the best health care possible. In charts, they compare traditional insurance, HMOs and PPOs, and list the government agencies to contact in case of problems. Workplace health issues and workers' compensation legislation are not overlooked, nor are issues of AIDS and the law, covered in an extensive chapter. To their credit and our benefit, Swartz and Isaacs don't seem to leave out anything--from Medicaid, Medicare and Medicare Supplement Insurance, to long-term care, living wills, and the right to die. One chapter even tells a layperson how to find a lawyer--and initiate a malpractice suit.
Copyright 1992 Reed Business Information, Inc.
--This text refers to an out of print or unavailable edition of this title.
From Library Journal
Written by two specialists in public health (Isaacs is a professor at Columbia and a lawyer specializing in health law; Swartz is a journalist), this book is more about your legal rights than medical or health care. It discusses how to select a doctor and then how to select a lawyer, if you need one. It covers insurance companies, doctors, hospitals, nursing homes, and government agencies. The authors explain clearly and concisely how to ask the right questions, consult the right resources, and protect yourself. This is probably the best guide to the legal aspects of healthcare this reviewer has seen. A similar title, Charles B. Inlander and Ed Weiner's Take This Book to the Hospital with You ( LJ 1/91. rev. ed.), covers health rather than legal concerns. Recommended for public and medical libraries.
- Barbara Kormelink, Bay Medical Ctr. Lib., Bay City, Mich.Copyright 1992 Reed Business Information, Inc.
--This text refers to an out of print or unavailable edition of this title.