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Full-Text Articles in Law
Corporate Power Unbound: Investorstate Arbitration Of Ip Monopolies On Medicines—Eli Lilly V. Canada And The Trans-Pacific Partnership Agreement, Brook K. Baker, Katrina Geddes
Corporate Power Unbound: Investorstate Arbitration Of Ip Monopolies On Medicines—Eli Lilly V. Canada And The Trans-Pacific Partnership Agreement, Brook K. Baker, Katrina Geddes
Journal of Intellectual Property Law
No abstract provided.
Classification Standards For Health Information: Ethical And Practical Approaches, Craig Konnoth
Classification Standards For Health Information: Ethical And Practical Approaches, Craig Konnoth
Washington and Lee Law Review Online
Secondary health information research requires vast quantities of data in order to make clinical and health delivery breakthroughs. Restrictive policies that limit the use of such information threaten to stymie this research. While the Notice of Proposed Rulemaking (NPRM) for the new Common Rule permits patients to provide broad consent for the use of their information for research, that policy offers insufficient flexibility. This Article suggests a flexible consenting system that allows patients to consent to a range of privacy risks. The details of the system will be fleshed out in future work.
Selected Issues Concerning The Ethical Use Of Big Data Health Analytics, Lieke Jetten, Stephen Sharon
Selected Issues Concerning The Ethical Use Of Big Data Health Analytics, Lieke Jetten, Stephen Sharon
Washington and Lee Law Review Online
No abstract provided.
Wage Theft As Public Larceny, Elizabeth J. Kennedy
Wage Theft As Public Larceny, Elizabeth J. Kennedy
Brooklyn Law Review
Home care for the elderly and disabled is a rapidly expanding industry in which structural and regulatory factors contribute to worker vulnerability and exploitation. Systemic exclusion from core federal employment and labor laws, as well as many state and local regulations, results in minimal consequences for employers who violate standards. Despite recent movement at the federal level to create a “new mindset” of rights and regulations, home care workers must be equipped with creative ways to enforce these new rights and to challenge existing gaps in enforcement. With the understanding that two-thirds of the home care industry is financed by …
Health Information Ownership: Legal Theories And Policy Implications, Lara Cartwright Smith, Elizabeth Gray, Jane H. Thorpe
Health Information Ownership: Legal Theories And Policy Implications, Lara Cartwright Smith, Elizabeth Gray, Jane H. Thorpe
Vanderbilt Journal of Entertainment & Technology Law
This Article explores the nature and characteristics of health information that make it subject to federal and state laws and the existing legal framework that confers rights and responsibilities with respect to health information. There are numerous legal and policy considerations surrounding the question of who owns health information, including whether and how to confer specific ownership rights to health information. Ultimately, a legal framework is needed that reflects the rights of a broad group of stakeholders in the health information marketplace, from patients to providers to payers, as well as the public's interest in appropriate sharing of health information.