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The Soul of the Young Lawyer

Every day, we are surrounded by the material aspects of life that feed our stomachs, egos, or other physical needs. We often forget to feed the soul. There is an old theory about law students: they all start law school wanting to save the world, but by the time they graduate, they want the job that pays the most. I was the opposite. I started out in law school wanting to make as much money as possible, but as time went on, I found that the quality of the work mattered to me as much, if not more, than the money. I have come to think of those intangible aspects of a career as feeding the soul.

Representing clients in Workers’ Compensation gives me the opportunity to represent real people with real problems. My clients are suffering. They have staggering medical bills. They cannot pay the mortgage or buy food for their families. My job lets me help them.

Often, my clients have done everything right, but the insurance company won’t live up to its responsibility. The client has seen the doctors he was told to see. He has done the physical therapy prescribed. He has had the surgery recommended. He has taken the medications ordered. Through no fault of his own, his injury is one that will never fully heal. Amazingly, the insurance company still will not pay for lost wages and medical care. This is where I come in and can help them.

I feel very fortunate to have found a job that feeds my soul.

Lawsuit: Trinity at fault for hepatitis outbreak

Today’s post was shared by The Workers’ Injury Law & Advocacy Group and comes from www.sfgate.com

MINOT, N.D. (AP) — The Minot nursing home where dozens of residents contracted hepatitis C last year has filed a lawsuit against Trinity Health that claims the health care provider is responsible for the outbreak.

Forty-six people were infected last year with the virus that can cause serious liver damage and even death. All but one of them had spent time at the ManorCare Health Services nursing home, according to KXMC-TV in Minot (http://bit.ly/1maQZ4r ).

The lawsuit, which ManorCare filed in federal court last week, alleges that one Trinity Health employee is responsible for the spread of the disease that was first reported in August 2013. It says Trinity, which handles some services for ManorCare, should have been aware of “serious longstanding problems” with the employee’s phlebotomy, or blood service, practices.

Hepatitis C, caused by a virus that results in an infection of the liver, is primarily transmitted by blood-to-blood contact. Some people who get it recover, but most carry the virus in their blood for the course of their lifetime and can develop chronic infection.

The worker, who’s listed in court documents only as “Employee A,” allegedly performed the majority of Trinity’s phlebotomy services at ManorCare. ManorCare says it had no duty to supervisor control the employee in question.

The lawsuit also alleges that when investigators from the U.S. Centers for Disease Control and Prevention and the North Dakota Department of Health came to…

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