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8 DePaul J. Health Care L. 263 (2004-2005)
Mandatory Arbitration Agreements Do Not Belong in Nursing Home Contracts with Residents

handle is hein.journals/dephcl8 and id is 271 raw text is: MANDATORY ARBITRATION AGREEMENTS
DO NOT BELONG IN NURSING HOME CONTRACTS
WITH RESIDENTS
Ann E. Krasuski*
I. INTRODUCTION
The Supreme Court endorses them. Businesses, lending institutions,
and health care providers often rely on them. Employers impose them
2
on their employees.'   State legislatures curb their use. Arbitration
providers themselves refuse to enforce them in certain disputes,3 and
consumer advocates typically oppose them.4 Originally intended for
arm's length transactions between parties in relatively equal bargaining
positions,5 arbitration agreements are appearing with greater frequency
in contracts of all varieties.' They have become a staple in consumer
contracts, and have even been spotted on a box of Cheerios. Recently,
seeing an opportunity to avoid costly and reputation-breaking litigation,
nursing homes have begun to incorporate them in admission
agreements with residents. These arbitration agreements may be good
for nursing homes, but they are expensive proceedings in a forum
generally unfavorable to consumers.
Many residents and their families do not read carefully - if at
all- the admission materials they are given and asked to sign upon
*Executive Text Editor, DePaul Journal of Health Care Law. B.A., University of
Indiana at Bloomington; M.A., University of Texas at Austin; J.D., DePaul University
College of Law.
' Jean R. Sternlight, Panacea or Corporate Tool?: Debunking the Supreme
Court's Preference For Binding Arbitration, 74 WASH. U. L. Q. 637 (1996).
2 See, e.g., ARK CODE ANN. § 16-108-201 (2001) (exempting personal injury and
tort matters from enforcement of arbitration agreements); KAN. STAT. ANN. 5-
401(c)(3) (1991) (exempting tort claims); MONT. CODE ANN. 27-5-114(2)(a) (1995)
(exempting personal injury claims).
3 See Kersten Norlin, AAA Announces Change in Health Care Policy, AM. ARB.
AsS'N (2002), athttp://www.adr.org.
4 See   PUBLIC  CITIZEN, THE   COSTS   OF  ARBITRATION  (2002), at
http://www.citizen.org/documents/ACF 11OA.PDF.
' Sternlight, supra note 1, at 641.
6 See Jane Spencer, Signing A way Your Right to Sue, WALL ST. J., Oct. 1, 2003,
at D1.
' Ellie Winninghoff, A fair fight? Arbitration may not always be in your best
interest, CIIi. TRw., Nov. 24, 1994, at C1.
8 See discussion infra Part IV.A.

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