By Nicolas Terry
Recorded at the 2019 annual meeting of the Southeastern Association of Law Schools during a panel reviewing the year in health care financing, this episode features a talk by Professor John Cogan from the University of Connecticut School of Law. Professor Cogan focuses his research and teaching on health care organizations and finance, health law and policy, federal health programs, health care fraud and abuse, and health insurance law. He is the co-author of a treatise on Medicare and Medicaid bankruptcy issues, as well as the author of numerous scholarly articles on a range of health insurance topics, including the Affordable Care Act and HIPAA. In this talk Professor Cogan discussed first, Medicaid: including expansion, work requirements, and the latest court decisions; second, Section 1557 and the proposed civil rights regulations; and third, the DeOtte v. Azar case and the resultant contraceptive mandate mess.
The Week in Health Law Podcast from Nicolas Terry is a commuting-length discussion about some of the more thorny issues in health law and policy. Subscribe at Apple Podcasts or Google Play, listen at Stitcher Radio, Spotify, Tunein or Podbean.
Show notes and more are at TWIHL.com. If you have comments, an idea for a show or a topic to discuss you can find me on Twitter @nicolasterry and @WeekInHealthLaw.
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I know very well that Professor Kogan focuses his research and education on health research companies and finance, health laws and policies, federal health programs, healthcare fraud and abuse, and health insurance law. She is the co-author of a treatise on Medicare and Medicaid Bankruptcy Issues, as well as numerous scholarly articles on various issues related to the Affordable Care Act and health insurance, including HIPA. We should all be concerned about health. And of course we should all take a stand against drugs. Because tobacco products not only endanger the health of the consumer, the smoker also poses a threat to everyone around them.