The Medical-Legal Partnership for Children in Hawai'i (MLPC) has worked to address the social determinants of health for low-income patient-families since 2009. Focused on identifying health-harming legal needs, doctors and lawyers work together to assist families with family law, housing, public benefits, education, employment, civil rights, and other concerns. Providing free, direct legal service in the medical setting allows the medical-legal partnership (MLP) team to identify community-wide concerns such as language access violations, racial discrimination, and unfair policies. These individual concerns then inform systemic advocacy and community engagement efforts. The MLPC Hawai'i team has grown through its experiences working with public housing residents, Micronesian migrant communities, and low-income families, ultimately evolving the national MLP framework to become a patient-centered "medical-legal home." This evolution is possible through the utilization of "rebellious lawyering" concepts of working with, not just on behalf of, community clients. This article will introduce the concept of a medical-legal partnership, provide examples of lessons learned from working alongside vulnerable and resilient communities, and explore the idea of the patient-centered medical-legal home as an innovative program to improve the social determinants of health and reduce health disparities.
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http://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pmc/articles/PMC6603900 | PMC |
This Report from the Field chronicles the establishment of Georgetown University's Perinatal Legal Assistance and Wellbeing Project, a medical-legal partnership in Washington, D.C. It describes foundational steps, implementation strategies, and lessons learned, and reflects on impacts of addressing the unmet legal needs of birthing individuals.
View Article and Find Full Text PDFIn the current United States economy, wellness is predominantly marketed to society's privileged individuals, catering to a mostly white and high-income clientele. When marginalized communities encounter wellness services, such as in the workplace, they are faced with an implicitly biased industry. These biases include an emphasis on individual behavior change without considering social determinants of health (SDOH), cultural appropriation of wellness activities for capitalistic gain, use of biased health measures like Body-Mass Index (BMI), and constant images of and expectations of achieving a stereotypical healthy body.
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October 2024
GEORGIA STATE UNIVERSITY, ATLANTA, GEORGIA, USA.
Few people in my memory have a name that more appropriately defines the life they have lived. "Charitable purpose" as defined in O.C.
View Article and Find Full Text PDFJ Law Med Ethics
October 2024
YALE UNIVERSITY, NEW HAVEN, CONNECTICUT, USA.
Medical-legal partnerships (MLPs) support patients and clinicians by streamlining legal and medical care and helping identify and address a subset of social drivers of health (SDOH). Less is known on the effect of MLPs on the competency of residents regarding SDOH. The aim of this study was to identify how integration of an MLP into a pediatric residency training program affected residents' experience understanding and addressing SDOH.
View Article and Find Full Text PDFJ Law Med Ethics
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HEALTH LAW PARTNERSHIP (HELP) LEGAL SERVICES CLINIC, ATLANTA, GEORGIA, USA.
Charity Scott brought health law to Georgia State College of Law in the fall of 1987. Through her faculty appointment, along with her boundless energy and intellectual curiosity, she set herself on an odyssey. She began by teaching a single general health law class.
View Article and Find Full Text PDFEnter search terms and have AI summaries delivered each week - change queries or unsubscribe any time!