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Articles 1 - 30 of 54
Full-Text Articles in Law
The Pharmaceutical Industry, Aids And Justice, Jose López Guzman
The Pharmaceutical Industry, Aids And Justice, Jose López Guzman
Angela Aparisi Miralles
This article offers an approximation to the broad, and complicated, framework of relationships between the Third World and pharmaceutical companies. In the first part of this work, reference is made to the poverty of these countries, their lack of health education, the scarcity of basic hygiene, and of course, their greatly limited access to medicines, especially those for AIDS. The article then proceeds to the issue of the pharmaceutical companies’ degree of responsibility in the paucity of medicines in certain areas of the world. One factor that most limits access to medicines is price. Many sectors propose acting upon the …
What Happened To No-Fault? The Role Of Error Reporting In Healthcare Reform, Henry Y. Huang, Farzad Soleimani
What Happened To No-Fault? The Role Of Error Reporting In Healthcare Reform, Henry Y. Huang, Farzad Soleimani
Henry Y Huang
No-fault systems for compensating medical injuries offer theoretical advantages over tort-based malpractice litigation, but may not actually reduce medical error rates or costs in practice. Surveys of doctors in the United States, a tort-based system, and New Zealand, a no-fault system, show that physicians across both systems share similar concerns about error reporting. These results suggest that error reporting, instead of simple cost reduction, should play a central role in no-fault compensation systems, which would reduce mistakes, improve quality going forward, generate feedback to physicians, and provide the public with greater information about their healthcare providers.
Bureaucracy, Bacteria, And Blame: Risk Based Inspection Systems And The Modern Food Saftey Scheme, Educating Americans To Just Do It Well Done, Heather N. Sutton
Bureaucracy, Bacteria, And Blame: Risk Based Inspection Systems And The Modern Food Saftey Scheme, Educating Americans To Just Do It Well Done, Heather N. Sutton
Heather N. Sutton
This comment focuses on the recent implementation of the risk based inspection system (RBIS) by the United States Department of Agriculture. A discussion of food safety evolution and consideration of the impact of the system, pre-RBIS and post-RBIS, concludes that consumer savviness is not adequately taken into account and that education as to food safety and risk is the most efficient and necessary component to government efforts to address consumer health as related to food consumption.
The Trouble With Putting All Of Your Eggs In One Basket: Using A Property Rights Model To Resolve Disputes Over Cryopreserved Embryos, Bridget M. Fuselier
The Trouble With Putting All Of Your Eggs In One Basket: Using A Property Rights Model To Resolve Disputes Over Cryopreserved Embryos, Bridget M. Fuselier
Bridget M Fuselier
“The Trouble With Putting All of Your Eggs in One Basket:
Using a Property Rights Model to Resolve Disputes Over Cryopreserved Embryos”
Bridget M. Fuselier
ABSTRACT
This article covers a very current and relevant topic in today’s legal environment. Previous articles have merely discussed competing models or coverage of the disputes in the case law. My article embarks upon a comprehensive look at the specific problem presented and then goes on to offer a specific model with proposed legislation to address these disputes in a fundamentally more efficient manner.
As evidenced by current efforts in a number of states, the …
People As Crops, Evelyn L. Wilson
People As Crops, Evelyn L. Wilson
Evelyn L. Wilson
In 1807, Congress passed a law prohibiting the importation of slaves. The South began to feel the effect of labor shortages and prices escalated. To meet this demand, farmers in the upper south states, especially Virginia, began the systematic breeding of slaves for sale to the southwest. Through the use of statements from Virginia statesmen and from some of Virginia’s former slaves, my paper discusses slave breeding, first as a consequence of slavery, as an added benefit to the labor obtained from the slave.
My father was born in Virginia, as was his father, as was his father, as was …
Can State Health Reform Initiatives Achieve Universal Coverage? California's Recent Failed Experiment, Susan A. Channick
Can State Health Reform Initiatives Achieve Universal Coverage? California's Recent Failed Experiment, Susan A. Channick
Susan Channick
No abstract provided.
Dumping Emtala: Restoring The Fiduciary Ethic, Improving Community Care, And Increasing Efficiency Through The Membership Model, Joseph A. Gonzalez
Dumping Emtala: Restoring The Fiduciary Ethic, Improving Community Care, And Increasing Efficiency Through The Membership Model, Joseph A. Gonzalez
Joseph A Gonzalez
The U.S. healthcare system is breaking. Hospital emergency departments ("EDs") disproportionately bear this burden. EMTALA, the federal law that mandates treatment in an emergency, is responsible. By forcing a hospital to provide medical treatment, despite a patient's inability to pay, EMTALA has altered treatment standards for the worse. In this note, I suggest that repealing EMTALA will allow the market to capture the treatment values that motivated EMTALA's passage. Permitting EDs to base treatment on a patient's pre-existing hospital membership encourages better treatment than EMTALA. A market driven ED will succeed where EMTALA has failed.
The Impact Of Government-Mandated Public Access To Biomedical Research: An Analysis Of The New Nih Depository Requirements, Kristopher A. Nelson
The Impact Of Government-Mandated Public Access To Biomedical Research: An Analysis Of The New Nih Depository Requirements, Kristopher A. Nelson
Kristopher A Nelson
On December 26, 2007, President Bush signed the Consolidated Appropriations Act of 2008. The bill, which became Public Law 110-161, contained a new requirement that manuscripts developed through funding by the National Institutes of Health (NIH) be made available to the public, free of charge, within one year after publication. This new mandatory requirement struck a compromise position between the existing pay-to-access model of private journal publishers and the potential free-for-all of the public domain. But did it go far enough? Should Congress have adopted a more aggressive policy of opening access to research? Alternatively, did Congress go too far, …
Paging King Solomon: Towards Allowing Organ Donation From Anencephalic Infants, Fazal Khan
Paging King Solomon: Towards Allowing Organ Donation From Anencephalic Infants, Fazal Khan
Fazal Khan
The article, Paging King Solomon: Towards Allowing Organ Donation from Anencephalic Infants, argues that organ donation from anencephalic infants is ethically and legally justifiable. Anencephaly is a medical condition characterized by a lack of brain development above the brainstem, so such children often lack a cerebrum, cerebellum and a skull. With an intact brainstem, these children can maintain heart and lung function. Without higher brain functioning though, these children are not capable of human consciousness and they typically have very short life spans measured in days or weeks. The way in which an anencephalic infant dies typically destroys the suitability …
Optimal Federalism Across Institutions: Theory And Applications From Environmental Policies And Health Care, Dale B. Thompson
Optimal Federalism Across Institutions: Theory And Applications From Environmental Policies And Health Care, Dale B. Thompson
Dale Thompson
This article presents a framework to analyze federalism based on enactment, implementation, and enforcement institutions. The framework provides a mechanism to determine whether a particular public policy should be conducted at a state or federal level, by examining economies and diseconomies of scale inherent in each of these institutions. This article then applies the framework in a comparison of environmental policies for wetlands and endangered species, and in an analysis of a health care policy. These applications can then serve as guides to legislators and judges in analyzing federalism concerns.
The Kidney Donor Scholarship Act: How College Scholarships Can Provide Financial Incentives For Kidney Donation While Preserving Altruistic Meaning, Jake Linford
Jake Linford
In the United States, lives are lost on a daily basis due to a significant shortfall in the availability of kidneys for transplantation. The current debate over possible solutions has primarily taken place at two theoretical poles—open markets and pure altruism. This article provides a timely and original response, bridging the gulf between the poles by proposing an educational scholarship to encourage kidney donation, and presenting data which indicates that the scholarship incentive may well increase the availability of transplantable kidneys in a way that preserves altruistic donation and mitigates potentially coercive market pressures. In making this case, this article …
The Ghost In Our Genes: Ehical And Legal Implications Of Epigenetics, Gary E. Marchant, Mark A. Rothstein, Yu Cai
The Ghost In Our Genes: Ehical And Legal Implications Of Epigenetics, Gary E. Marchant, Mark A. Rothstein, Yu Cai
Gary E. Marchant
Epigenetics is one of the most scientifically important, and legally and ethically significant, cutting-edge subjects of scientific discovery. Epigenetics link environmental and genetic influences on the traits and characteristics of an individual, and new discoveries reveal that a large range of environmental, dietary, behavioral, and medical experiences can significantly affect the future development and health of an individual and their offspring. This article describes and analyzes the ethical and legal implications of these new scientific findings.
Loco Labels And Marketing Madness: Improving How Consumers Interpret Information In The American Food Economy, Margaret Sova Mccabe
Loco Labels And Marketing Madness: Improving How Consumers Interpret Information In The American Food Economy, Margaret Sova Mccabe
Margaret Sova McCabe
America's current food labeling scheme, as illustrated by the example of salt, is flawed when examined from the consumer and public health perspective. While the Food, Drug, and Cosmetic Act has sound scientific standards, those standards as currently applied to labels do not efficiently signal health information to consumers. Without better information on labels, consumers will continue to make poor choices at the grocery store. However, there are promising new ways to label. Both the United Kingdom and the domestic supermarket chain Hannaford’s have implemented simple health labeling on food packaging or grocery shelves to improve the amount and location …
State Actors Beating Children: A Call For Judicial Relief, Deana Ann Pollard Sacks
State Actors Beating Children: A Call For Judicial Relief, Deana Ann Pollard Sacks
Deana A Pollard
Controversy over public school corporal punishment is at an all-time high. On August 20, 2008, the Human Rights Watch/ACLU brought public attention to the issue by releasing its report on corporal punishment of children in American public schools. Lawsuits challenging this state action on constitutional grounds continue to be filed, as advocates seeking to ban school paddling refuse to accept that beating students is constitutionally permissible, despite their repeated losses in the federal courts, and the Supreme Court’s refusal to consider the issue again on June 23, 2008. Ignoring the uproar, nearly half of the United States continue to employ …
The Emergent Logic Of Health Law, Maxwell Gregg Bloche
The Emergent Logic Of Health Law, Maxwell Gregg Bloche
Maxwell Gregg Bloche
The American health care system is on a glide path toward ruin. Health spending has become the fiscal equivalent of global warming, and the number of uninsured Americans is approaching 50 million. Can law help to divert our country from this path? There are reasons for deep skepticism. Law governs the provision and financing of medical care in fragmented and incoherent fashion. Commentators from diverse perspectives bemoan this chaos, casting it as an obstacle to change. I contend in this article that pessimism about health law’s prospects is unjustified, but that a new understanding of health law’s disarray is urgently …
Rulemaking Without Rules: An Empirical Study Of Direct Final Rulemaking, Michael Kolber
Rulemaking Without Rules: An Empirical Study Of Direct Final Rulemaking, Michael Kolber
Michael Kolber
In an effort to improve efficiency, several administrative agencies have adopted a procedure known as “direct final rulemaking” (DFR). Some academics have debated whether DFR violates the Administrative Procedure Act, but none have studied how DFR has functioned in practice. This paper, which examines the first decade of DFR at the Food and Drug Administration (FDA), is the first of this kind. The results are surprising, and suggest DFR deserves more study than it has received. Intended for noncontroversial rules that are expected to receive no significant comments in a notice-and-comment rulemaking, FDA has often used direct final rulemaking for …
Everything Old Is New Again: The Re-Emerging Public Health Right, Elizabeth A. Weeks
Everything Old Is New Again: The Re-Emerging Public Health Right, Elizabeth A. Weeks
Elizabeth A. Weeks
This Article offers a contemporary examination of traditional public health objectives to address social problems not amenable to individual resolution. Taking the tradition a step further, it defines a “public health right” that may justify certain government actions that otherwise appear to impair individual rights. For example, lawmakers are considering whether current regulations on prescription drugs should be loosened to allow terminally ill patients to access drugs before they have been tested and approved for the general public. This Article concludes that expanding access to experimental drugs would violate the public health right to scientific knowledge and new drug development. …
Punishing Pharmaceutical Companies For Unlawful Promotion Of Approved Drugs: Why The False Claims Act Is The Wrong Rx, Vicki W. Girard
Punishing Pharmaceutical Companies For Unlawful Promotion Of Approved Drugs: Why The False Claims Act Is The Wrong Rx, Vicki W. Girard
Vicki W Girard
This article criticizes the shift in focus from correction and compliance to punishment of pharmaceutical companies allegedly violating the Food, Drug, & Cosmetic Act (FD&C Act) prohibitions on unlawful drug promotion. Traditionally, the Food and Drug Administration (FDA) has addressed unlawful promotional activities under the misbranding and new drug provisions of the FD&C Act. Recently though, the Justice Department (DOJ) has expanded the purview of the False Claims Act to include the same allegedly unlawful behavior on the theory that unlawful promotion “induces” physicians to prescribe drugs that result in the filing of false claims for reimbursement. Unchecked and unchallenged, …
Comments On Liebman And Zeckhauser, Simple Humans, Complex Insurance, Subtle Subsidies, Edward J. Mccaffery
Comments On Liebman And Zeckhauser, Simple Humans, Complex Insurance, Subtle Subsidies, Edward J. Mccaffery
Edward J McCaffery
These are brief comments on an excellent paper by Jeffrey Liebman and Richard Zeckhauser, prepared for a conference sponsored by the Urban Institute and Brookings on tax and health care policy. Liebman and Zeckhauser summarize the complexities involved in making optimal health insurance decisions, and offer generally cautionary notes about conflating these with tax law (a theme of the conference). Most importantly, Liebman and Zeckhauser suggest a positive role for employers in health care and insurance decisions, as better setters or framers of choice sets—witness 401(k) plans. In this Commentary, I applaud Leibman and Zeckhauser’s general work and particular observation, …
An Analysis Of Medical Peer Review Immunity In Texas:, Lamar Odom, John A. Daniels
An Analysis Of Medical Peer Review Immunity In Texas:, Lamar Odom, John A. Daniels
lamar odom
ABSTRACT The physician and hospital share a symbiotic relationship. Most physicians need to have access to the medical equipment, staff and facilities provided by hospitals. Hospitals rely on physicians admitting patients as a primary source of revenue. Notwithstanding this fact, the physician’s ability to utilize the services of the hospital is contingent upon her obtaining medical staff membership and privileges. Prior to being granted privileges, the physician must submit to a process known as medical peer review. Peer review is a mandatory process that promotes quality of care, facilitates accreditation and is a necessary compliance requirement for hospitals to receive …
When Patients Say No (To Save Money): An Essay On The Tectonics Of Health Law, Mark A. Hall
When Patients Say No (To Save Money): An Essay On The Tectonics Of Health Law, Mark A. Hall
Mark A Hall
Our principal task in this essay is to show how the three principle parts of health law -- malpractice, bioethics, and health care finance -- are colliding in ways that will require adjustments in legal doctrine. These parts are like neighboring tectonic plates, either with their own central purposes and basic assumptions. For years each part developed quite independently. Recently, however, public policy increasingly has moved the plates into tension, producing seismic potential that has been largely unnoticed. We demonstrate this through a case study of one tectonic encounter -- a patient who says no to standard-of-care treatment because of …
Voluntary Disclosure Of Hiv/Aids Status By A Public Health Official To Law Enforcement Agents: The Shortcomings Of South Dakota's Law Section 34-22-12.1(6) And Traditional Public Health Measures, Daniel C. Moon
Daniel C Moon
Section 34-22-12.1(6) of South Dakota’s Codified Laws grants the Secretary of the Health Department to disclose private medical information regarding an individual’s HIV/AIDS status if he or she thinks that that individual is engaged in intentionally infecting another person with HIV/AIDS. This law is problematic because it does not (1) adequately protect an individual’s privacy, and (2) achieve its public health goals. From the privacy aspect, it provides less protection to information regarding an individual’s HIV/AIDS status from three aspects: (1) less protection than the same information possessed by covered entities under the Health Insurance Portability and Accountability Act (“HIPAA”), …
Hipaa And Its Privacy Regulations: Is There Too Much Privacy Regulation On Health Care Information?, Yuhong Wu
Hipaa And Its Privacy Regulations: Is There Too Much Privacy Regulation On Health Care Information?, Yuhong Wu
Yuhong Wu
In 1996, Congress passed HIPAA, and later on August 14, 2003 Department of Health and Human Services finalized HIPAA privacy regulations. HIPAA privacy regulation creates privacy right of personal healthcare information by giving individuals absolute control over their health information, setting boundaries on the use and disclosure of health information, and mandating covered entities to establish safeguards for healthcare information. In fact, HIPAA defines the privacy right in its finest granular form: the privacy right is enforced not only at individual level, but also for every chunk of personal healthcare information that is needed in any possible usage. This article …
The Medium Of Exchange Paradigm: A Fresh Look At Compensated Live-Organ Donation, Dean Lhospital
The Medium Of Exchange Paradigm: A Fresh Look At Compensated Live-Organ Donation, Dean Lhospital
Dean Lhospital
For over twenty years, human live-organ sales have been banned in the United States and most of the rest of the world. Observations and data arising from black market transactions and the few legal markets for organs suggest that permitting and regulating organ sales leads to more humane conditions than outlawing sales. Despite the data, opponents of organ sales still argue that selling human organs devalues human life. This article examines the panoply of organ markets – white, grey, and black – and identifies the source of this cognitive dissonance. Recognizing that there is a fundamental paradox in ethical objections, …
Dna Inside, Lori B. Andrews
Dna Inside, Lori B. Andrews
Lori B. Andrews
Theoretical Perspectives On Public Law, Administration And Public Health History, Lydia C. Stewart Ferreira
Theoretical Perspectives On Public Law, Administration And Public Health History, Lydia C. Stewart Ferreira
Lydia C. Stewart Ferreira
The struggle between authority and liberty, the tyranny of the majority, the prevention of harm, unlimited state control, the necessary rights belonging to citizens, and the establishment of contritutional checks by a consenting community - is the theory and practice of public health. This paper seeks to explore the interaction of epidemics on public and administrative legal theory. It is proposed that the legal theories of Locke in the 1600s and Mills in the 1800s regarding state and individual legal rights were shaped by public health disease epidemics of their day.
Influenza Genetic Sequence Patents: Where Intellectual Property Clashes With Public Health Needs, Lori B. Andrews, Laura A. Shackelton
Influenza Genetic Sequence Patents: Where Intellectual Property Clashes With Public Health Needs, Lori B. Andrews, Laura A. Shackelton
Lori B. Andrews
Entrenched Inequity: Health Care In The United States Of America, Jean Connolly Carmalt, Sarah Zaidi, Alicia Ely Yamin
Entrenched Inequity: Health Care In The United States Of America, Jean Connolly Carmalt, Sarah Zaidi, Alicia Ely Yamin
Jean Connolly Carmalt
This article analyzes the U.S. system for delivering health services in terms of the international human rights standards that apply to the human right to health. To that end, the article evaluates whether the health care system provides available, accessible, acceptable, and quality health goods and services. It finds that the United States fails to provide available care because services are insufficient in quantity and not located in reasonable proximity to all communities; that it fails to provide accessible care because of financial barriers to access and overly complicated requirements for access; that it fails to provide acceptable care because …
King Solomon’S Solution To The Disposition Of Embryos: Recognizing A Property Interest And Using Equitable Division, Kansas R. Gooden
King Solomon’S Solution To The Disposition Of Embryos: Recognizing A Property Interest And Using Equitable Division, Kansas R. Gooden
Kansas R Gooden
In your family law class, your professors have probably not lectured on the area of embryo disposition in divorce proceedings. Were you aware that courts across the country have ruled that the right not to procreate trumps the right to procreate in these situations? When divorce and IVF combine, it results in a complex legal battle. When a couple that used IVF divorces, who should get the remaining embryos? This article asserts that embryos should be considered property. The elements of ownership, possession, use, and exclusion, otherwise known as the bundle of sticks, are present. American law has taken an …
Open Source, Open Access, Open Transfer: Market Approaches To Research Bottlenecks, Robin C. Feldman
Open Source, Open Access, Open Transfer: Market Approaches To Research Bottlenecks, Robin C. Feldman
Robin C Feldman
One of the most hotly contested issues in the field of intellectual property law concerns the existence, or non-existence, of patent thickets and the extent to which any such bottlenecks may be interfering with research. For decades, scholars warned that problems related to the over proliferation of patent rights would interfere with innovation. In contrast, a growing body of commentary argues that patent thickets are not a problem in modern industries. Either patent thickets do not exist, or if they do, patent thickets do not interfere with the progress of research.
The rhetoric is particularly heated these days because of …