Revoke That Arbitration Agreement
05/24/09 14:25
If
you have signed an arbitration agreement with your
medical care providers, you might want to consider
revoking that agreement. First, you can refuse to
sign an arbitration agreement and also revoke any
signed agreement and Utah law prevents the health
care provider from withholding services. Remember,
the healthcare providers exist to serve you, not the
other way around. Signing an arbitration agreement
takes away your right to go to court, to seek a jury
of your peers. Also, signing an arbitration agreement
substitutes our free and open court system for a
pay-to-play system where you can wind up paying
thousands of dollars to get your claim heard. If you
become a victim of medical malpractice, such as a
misdiagnosed cancer, a surgeon who cuts the wrong
organ or a mother who suffers eclampsia before birth
or post partum bleeding, you would then need to pay
thousands and thousands of dollars just to get your
case heard. Why substitute this private and secret
system for the public courts, courts which allow the
public to know what doctors are bad, rather than keep
it a secret? Why substitute this private pay-to-play
arbitration scheme for the public system paid for by
your hard earned tax dollars? The reason: Insurance
companies know that individuals cannot afford to foot
the bill for private arbitration and won’t pursue
their rights when they become victimized by
incompetent and negligent health care providers.
Revoke that arbitration agreement and do it today. Send this form letter to your provider, and keep a copy for yourself and your file.
Form Letter Revoke Arbitration
Revoke that arbitration agreement and do it today. Send this form letter to your provider, and keep a copy for yourself and your file.
Form Letter Revoke Arbitration


















