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Ip Preparedness For Outbreak Diseases, Ana Santos Rutschman
Ip Preparedness For Outbreak Diseases, Ana Santos Rutschman
All Faculty Scholarship
Outbreaks of infectious diseases will worsen, as illustrated by the recent back-to-back Ebola and Zika epidemics. The development of innovative drugs, especially in the form of vaccines, is key to minimizing future outbreaks, yet current intellectual property (IP) regimes are ineffective in supporting this goal.
IP scholarship has not adequately addressed the role of IP in the development of vaccines for outbreak diseases. This Article fills that void. Through case studies on the recent Ebola and Zika outbreaks, it provides the first descriptive analysis of the role of IP from the pre- to the post-outbreak stages, specifically identifying IP inefficiencies. …
Three Lost Ebola Facts And Public Health Legal Preparedness, Robert Gatter
Three Lost Ebola Facts And Public Health Legal Preparedness, Robert Gatter
Saint Louis University Journal of Health Law & Policy
Three key facts about Ebola Transmission should drive policy designed to control the risk of transmission during a crisis.
- Ebola—like HIV—is not easily transmissible human-to-human.
- Ebola has “dry” and “wet” symptoms, and only the wet symptoms threaten public health.
- A fever is Ebola’s canary in a coal mine; it provides timely warning of a coming threat.
Yet, during the U.S. Ebola scare in 2014, these three facts were lost. Unnecessary quarantine, stigma, and burden on those exposed to Ebola resulted, including especially for those who volunteered to fight the disease at its source abroad. Tragically, the law permitted these injustices …