55 results match your criteria: "GEORGE WASHINGTON UNIVERSITY LAW SCHOOL[Affiliation]"

Background: Osteosarcoma is the most common primary bone malignancy. It has classically been described as having a bimodal incidence by age. We sought to identify whether the bimodal incidence distribution still exists for osteosarcoma using the SEER and NIS databases.

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Vaccine Politics.

Health Aff (Millwood)

July 2024

Richard Hughes IV is a partner with Epstein Becker Green in Washington, D.C., and a professorial lecturer in law at the George Washington University Law School, also in Washington, D.C. The views reflected here are his own. To access the authors' disclosures, click on the Details tab of the article online.

A vaccine law and policy expert reflects on the dangers of the influence of politics on public health decision making.

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Post- abortion restrictions impact access and choice in the context of reproductive genetic medicine, raising serious reproductive justice concerns. The consequences of these restrictions are particularly acute and far-reaching for individuals with genetic conditions and their families.

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In , Justice Thomas wrote an impassioned concurrence describing abortions based on sex, disability or race as a form of 'modern-day eugenics'. He defended the challenged Indiana reason-based abortion (RBA) ban as a necessary antidote to these practices. Inspired by this concurrence, legislatures have increasingly enacted similar bills and statutes allegedly as a prophylactic to 'eugenics', its underlying discrimination, and the racial disparities eugenics caused.

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Across the country, legal and health care professionals who understand that health outcomes are most influenced by social and environmental conditions have improved patient health by adopting the interdisciplinary MLP health care delivery model. However, the MLP field cannot advance population health, let alone long-term health equity, until it addresses the structural determinants of health inequity that are rooted in discrimination, segregation, and other forms of racial and ethnic subordination.

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Purpose: More than a decade after the Genetic Information Nondiscrimination Act (GINA) was passed, there is a paucity of research on the general public's awareness of GINA. This study's objective was to assess knowledge of GINA and concerns of genetic discrimination.

Methods: A quota-based sample of US adults (N = 421) was recruited via Qualtrics Research Services to complete an online survey.

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Although human interactions with cats are often even typically analyzed in the context of domesticity, with a focus on what sorts of interactions might make both people and cats "happy at home," a large number of cats in the world live, for one reason or another, beyond the bounds of domesticity. Human interactions with these more or less free-living cats raise deeply controversial questions about how both the cats and the people they interact with should be sensibly managed, and about the moral imperatives that ought to guide the management of their interactions through the laws and public policies regulating both human interactions with pets and with wildlife. We review the geography of human interactions with cats living beyond the bounds of domesticity.

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Legal challenges in reproductive genetics.

Fertil Steril

February 2021

Health Law Initiative, The George Washington University Law School, Washington, D.C.. Electronic address:

Recent advancements in reproductive genetics have resulted in the availability of an extraordinary amount of new and detailed information for patients and providers. Whereas this information can inform many who are facing difficult clinical decisions, it can also introduce complex and uncertain choices. Expanded carrier screening and preimplantation genetic diagnosis for aneuploidy are important examples of new genetic techniques that are now widely used in reproductive medicine.

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The Revised Common Rule and Mental Illness: Enduring Gaps in Protections.

Am J Law Med

November 2020

Lisa E. Smilan, Visiting Scholar, Institute of Law, Psychiatry, and Public Policy, University of Virginia, Charlottesville, VA; J.D., George Washington University Law School, Washington, D.C.; LL.M., specialization in health law, University of Maryland Francis King Carey School of Law, Baltimore, MD; Member, National Institutes of Health Intramural Institutional Review Board, Bethesda, MD. The opinions here expressed are those of the Author and completely independent of the National Institutes of Health. The Author thanks Ellen Wright Clayton for supporting this scholarship and for comments on earlier drafts. Thanks, also, to Leslie Meltzer Henry for her guidance and encouragement, and both Richard Bonnie and Xuemei Ding for their hospitality at the University of Virginia and for facilitating access to university libraries. Finally, thanks to the anonymous peer reviewers for their observations, probing questions, and helpful suggestions, and AJLM editors Jessa Boubker and Sharon Jaquez for their dedication and meticulous care in preparing this Article for publication.

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Globally, due to public concerns of genetic discrimination, some countries and insurance industries have adopted policies restricting insurer use of genetic information, such as the US Genetic Information Nondiscrimination Act (GINA). This study reports on combined analysis of two surveys assessing public knowledge of GINA and concerns of genetic discrimination in a diverse U.S.

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In the 2008 article "A Review of Feral Cat Control," Robertson explored the trend developing in the management of so-called "feral" cats away from lethal methods toward the non-lethal method of trap-neuter-return (TNR). The review explored various issues raised by the presence of these unowned, free-roaming cats in our neighborhoods (e.g.

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The Role of Health in Climate Litigation.

Am J Public Health

April 2018

Sabrina McCormick and Samuel J. Simmens are with the Milken Institute School of Public Health, George Washington University, Washington, DC. Robert Glicksman and LeRoy Paddock are with George Washington University Law School. Daniel Kim is with the Trachtenberg School of Public Policy & Public Administration, George Washington University. Brittany Whited is with the US Agency for International Development, Washington, DC.

Objectives: To examine how the courts, which play a critical role in shaping public policy, consider public health in climate change and coal-fired power plant lawsuits.

Methods: We coded US local, state, and federal court decisions relating to climate change and coal-fired power plants from 1990 to 2016 (n = 873) and qualitatively investigated 139 cases in which litigants raised issues concerning the health impacts of climate change. We also conducted 78 interviews with key litigants, advocates, industry representatives, advising scientists, and legal experts.

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