Year: 2015

Disabilities

"Cold, getting warmer, hot": New app helps blind people find each other

Emma tests a new prototype app that lets blind people find other blind people. “We’d arranged to meet at a shopping mall but, as time went by, I began to wonder why my wife was so late,” says Doug Wakefield, one half of a married blind couple visiting the CSUN accessible technology conference in San Diego last week. His wife Judy picks up the story: “Eventually, someone came up to me and said, are you waiting for a man with a guide dog? “We were to meet at the main entrance but I was to the left of the door and Doug was standing to the right, only ten feet away.” Lots of blind people have blind friends, so This game of cat and mouse…

How Do Non-citizens and Nonresidents Get Benefits?

Social Security pays retirement and disability benefits to tens of millions of Americans. But the program doesn’t just provide for benefits to U.S. citizens. Indeed, even as controversy rages over the status of undocumented workers for various government programs, Social Security’s rules contain many provisions for resident and nonresident aliens, and some of them shock people who didn’t realize that noncitizens could even qualify for Social Security benefits. The Motely Fool takes a look at five ways in which Social Security looks beyond citizenship when making payments to workers. 1. Many noncitizens living in the U.S. can get Social Security benefits Being a U.S. citizen isn’t a requirement for receiving Social Security. According to the Social Security Administration, noncitizens who are …

Fee hike implemented

Further to Ian’s post last week, court fees have been increased from today – by over 600{9c067c25ed205f086ce6001901eb13dfadc688a7aefab9f64e0c55b8c5a55872} in some cases. The Law Society have set out the arguments they are raising in support of their proposed judicial review. The most eye-catching of these is that the fee increases are “tantamount to ‘selling justice’ contrary to the principles of Magna Carta”, presuambly on the basis that the new fees will not just be covering the court’s costs of the claim, but subsidising the public purse generally. Section 29 of Magna Carta 1297 is still in force and provides: “… We will sell to no man, we will not deny or defer to any man either Justice or Right.” Whether or not 13th Century barons had court fees in mind…

headlines

Studies Link Zofran to Birth Defects

In the past few years, several studies have identified a potential link between Zofran (ondansetron) and an increased risk of birth defects. Harvard and Boston University Review This 2012 epidemiological review of more than 10,000 birth records found that women who were prescribed Zofran as an off-label treatment for morning sickness were over twice as […]

Road Accidents

Los Alamitos Car Accident Proves Fatal

Brenda Coronel, 23, was fatally injured in a highway crash in Los Alamitos early morning on April 26, 2015. According to a news report in The Orange County Register, the car accident occurred on the southbound 605 Freeway just south of Katella Avenue. California Highway Patrol officials say one vehicle rear-ended another causing the

Medical Negligence

Can I file a lawsuit against my doctor for battery?

From time-to-time, this blog discusses surgical errors and how they can be extremely damaging to victims. While doctors and nurses are often responsible for leaving foreign objects inside of patients, operating on a wrong body part, or performing the wrong operations, they are also sometimes responsible for providing a patient with an unnecessary or unwanted operation. The results from these procedures can be just as harmful, so you should be aware of how the law operates in this context. If you are subjected to an operation against your will, if a doctor obtained consent for the operation through fraudulent means, or you were incompetent to give consent and an operation was conducted on you anyway, then you are the victim of battery. Legally speaking, battery …

Work-Industrial

Man could face life without arm due to workplace injury

While there is some degree of risk in almost all occupations, some hold more potential dangers than others. For example, those who deal with heavy machinery may have a higher risk of becoming injured than those who work at a computer. Regardless of the type of occupation, states such as Illinois require employers to provide workers’ compensation insurance benefits to help in the event an employee suffers a workplace injury. One out-of-state man will likely need such benefits after a serious accident caused the loss of his arm. The accident happened one morning in April. A 38-year-old man apparently became entangled in a piece of machinery. He arm was severed as a result. Employees at the company, Northern Contours, who have emergency response training …

Insurance

HELP Leaders Create EHR Working Group

“The goal of this working group is to identify the five or six things we can do to help make the failed promise of electronic health records something that physicians and providers look forward to, instead of something they endure,” said Chairman Lamar Alexander, R-Tenn.

Insurance

MSHA Offering Dust Monitor Certification Courses

Beginning Feb. 1, 2016, mine operators must use Continuous Personal Dust Monitors to sample for respirable coal mine dust on working sections of underground coal mines. The courses are required for personnel who sample, maintain or calibrate CPDMs.

headlines

Set Sail with Safety First

According to the statistics, the number one contributing factor in boating accidents is operator inattention. The second most important factor is operator inexperience. National Safe Boating Month, serves as an important time to remind everyone to make safety a priority, whether you own a vessel, personal watercraft such as a jet ski or wave runner, or […]

Mascio v. Colvin: Disability Benefits Appeals

Mascio v. Colvin, an appeal from the United States Court of Appeals for the Fourth Circuit, involved claimant who applied for Supplemental Security Income (SSI), and the Social Security Administration (SSA) denied her claim for benefits. Claimant based her request for disability benefits on the fact she suffers from a degenerative disc disorder, carpal tunnel syndrome (CTS), and an adjustment disorder. Adjustment disorder is a psychological illness related to stress that makes it difficult for patients to engage in normal social situations or workplace situations. She had a hearing before an administrative law judge (ALJ), who determined claimant was not disabled. Claimant timely appealed this decision, and the appellate court reversed ALJ’s decision and remanded the case for a new hearing before a different ALJ.

Personal Injury

Insurers’ proposals for further reform to the PI sector

The Association of British Insurers’ website recently set out its top 10 insurance and savings priorities for the next parliamentary session. The most striking of these for personal injury lawyers is the proposal for “Modernising the civil justice system to get compensation to claimants rather than lawyers.” The ABI fleshes this out by suggesting increasing the small claims track limit for PI claims, considering a reduction in the current 3-year limitation period and using fixed legal fees to address the rise in industrial deafness claims and ensuring people suffering from asbestos related conditions get compensation quicker. Another of the ABI proposals which would also affect the PI sector is a proposal for “Cracking down on the behaviour of Claims Management Companies” by requiring them to…