20 results match your criteria: "Georgetown Law Center[Affiliation]"

Introduction: Despite international commitment to achieving the end of HIV as a public health threat, progress is off-track and existing gaps have been exacerbated by COVID-19's collision with existing pandemics. Born out of models of political accountability and historical healthcare advocacy led by people living with HIV, community-led monitoring (CLM) of health service delivery holds potential as a social accountability model to increase the accessibility and quality of health systems. However, the effectiveness of the CLM model in strengthening accountability and improving service delivery relies on its alignment with evidence-based principles for social accountability mechanisms.

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Integrating Lawyers Into Perinatal Care Teams to Address Unmet, Health-Harming Legal Needs.

Obstet Gynecol

December 2023

MedStar Health Research Institute, the Georgetown University Health Justice Alliance Perinatal Legal Assistance & Wellbeing Program, and the Georgetown University Health Justice Alliance, Georgetown Law Center, Washington, DC.

Across the United States, historically imposed structural, social, and environmental variables are intimately connected to poor obstetric outcomes and high maternal and infant mortality rates among Black pregnancy-capable people. Efforts to diminish the effect of these variables include integrating screening for social determinants of health during the perinatal period and treating them with social services, mental health support, and other referrals, including connections to community-based resources. Although helpful, some of these social determinants cannot be overcome without legal advocacy.

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Dying Inside: Litigation Patterns for Deaths in Jail Custody.

J Correct Health Care

August 2023

O'Neill Institute for National and Global Health Law, Georgetown Law Center, Washington, District of Columbia, USA.

Millions of dollars are spent annually in private litigation against jails. This article analyzes a novel dataset developed from dockets and reports of cases filed against jails by the estates of individuals who died in jail custody. The total amount of plaintiffs' awards represented in the sample was over $292,234,224.

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Priming COVID-19's consequences can increase support for investments in public health.

Soc Sci Med

May 2023

Department of Social and Political Sciences, Bocconi University, Milan, Italy; O'Neill Institute for National and Global Health Law, Georgetown Law Center, Washington, District of Columbia, USA. Electronic address:

Can messaging that emphasizes the costs of COVID-19 increase popular support for more proactive public health policies? People who experience disasters often become more supportive of policies to address their underlying causes, and the pandemic may have similar spillover effects for public opinion. To test this idea, the study implements a survey experiment in Italy, Germany, and the United States in which half of the respondents were randomly assigned to a prime about the impact of the pandemic prior to answering questions about their support for public health policies. The results show that respondents who received the prime became more favorable toward increased government spending on domestic and foreign public health programs alike.

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Genetic carrier screening in donors: a challenging frontier.

F S Rep

March 2023

Division of Reproductive Endocrinology and Infertility, Department of Obstetrics and Gynecology, Baylor College of Medicine, Houston, Texas.

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Article Synopsis
  • Unmet legal needs lead to issues like housing, income, and food insecurity, negatively affecting health and worsening health inequities.
  • New approaches are needed to train future lawyers, doctors, and healthcare workers to tackle these health injustices.
  • Academic Medical-Legal Partnerships (A-MLPs) can help by combining resources from law and medical schools to promote health justice through service, education, and research.
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The legal issues surrounding in vitro fertilization from its beginnings have found their way into courtrooms and legislatures, with disposition of cryopreserved in vitro fertilization preimplantation embryos presenting legal and policy conundrum for patients, providers, and lawmakers in a myriad of contexts. This article examines the legal aspects of selected embryo disposition issues and the potential impact of laws enacted following the US Supreme Court's recent removal of Constitutional protections for reproductive choice and autonomy in Dobbs v. Jackson Women's Health Organization.

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The harms of punishing substance use during pregnancy.

Int J Drug Policy

December 2021

Medical Anthropology and Family Medicine, Boston University School of Medicine, 1 Boston Medical Center Pl., Boston, MA 02118, United States.

As rates of substance use have increased in the United States, rates of substance-involved pregnancies have also been on the rise, inspiring new civil policies designed to punish pregnant and parenting individuals who engage in substance use or are living with an untreated substance use disorder. Proponents of punitive civil policies argue that such policies will deter substance use behaviors and/or that substance use during pregnancy deserves punishment for harming the fetus. Current scientific evidence invalidates both claims, offering compelling evidence that punitive civil policies often worsen the harms of substance use for both parent and child.

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Legal considerations in reproductive medicine.

Fertil Steril

February 2021

Department of Obstetrics and Gynecology, Sidney Kimmel Medical College, Thomas Jefferson University, Philadelphia, Pennsylvania. Electronic address:

Legal issues affect reproductive medical practice throughout the entire world. The breadth and depth of this interrelationship extend far beyond the scope of one series of articles in Views and Reviews. Given this limitation, we have chosen to present five topics, all different, but illustrative of key concepts that influence our practice of reproductive medicine.

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Gestational surrogacy, made possible with the introduction of in vitro fertilization, has expanded family building options while introducing novel challenges to established legal principles involving constitutional, contract, and family law as well as duty of care and negligence. Both legislatures and courts have grappled with how to apply these sometimes-competing areas of law to protect participants and professionals, and to create legally secure families. This article explores the following: the Constitutionally protected rights of privacy and reproductive autonomy of gestational surrogates; Contract Law principles that govern surrogacy contracts; the varied ways states have extended Family Law to establish legally recognized parent-child relationships between intended parents and children born to gestational surrogates; and the legal duties of care medical professionals owe to their patients.

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Feeding Low-Income Children during the Covid-19 Pandemic.

N Engl J Med

April 2020

From the Departments of Health Policy and Management (C.G.D., S.N.B.) and Nutrition (E.K.), Harvard T.H. Chan School of Public Health, Boston; and Georgetown Law Center, Washington, DC (S.E.F.).

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Do bans help modern public health?

Science

January 2020

Lawrence O. Gostin is the O'Neill Chair in Global Health Law and a professor of medicine at Georgetown University in Washington, DC, USA. He is director of the O'Neill Institute for National and Global Health Law at Georgetown Law Center, Washington, DC, USA, and director of the World Health Organization Collaborating Center on National and Global Health Law.

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Legal principles and seminal legal cases in oocyte donation.

Fertil Steril

December 2018

Georgetown Law Center, Kennedy Institute of Ethics, Georgetown University, Washington, DC.

Oocyte donation has played an increasingly important role in assisted reproductive technologies since the early 1980s. Over the past 30 years, unique legal standards have evolved to address issues in the oocyte donation procedure itself as well as the disputes over issues, such as parentage, that inevitably arise with new technologies, particularly for individuals seeking to build nontraditional families. This essay will explore oocyte donation's legal aspects as well as seminal law concerning the procedure, including statutory law (uniform and model provisions and enacted state laws) and selected judicial opinions concerning surrogacy and parentage, testing of oocyte donors, mix-ups of donated oocytes, and donor compensation.

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The State's Interest in Potential Life.

J Law Med Ethics

December 2016

Assistant Professor of Law at the University of San Diego School of Law. He received his LL.M. (2013) from Georgetown Law Center (Washington, D.C.); J.D. (2010) from Yale Law School (New Haven, CT); D.Phil. (2007) from Oxford University (Oxford, UK); and A.B. (2004) from Harvard College (Cambridge, MA). His publications appear in leading journals of law and bioethics, and he is a regular contributor to the Huffington Post.

Courts have resolved a range of controversies by casual appeal to the state's interest in "potential life" that Roe held capable of overriding even fundamental rights. My analysis of this potential-life interest reveals its use to mean not one but four species of concern. I call these prenatal welfare, postnatal welfare, social values, and social effects and demonstrate how they operate under different conditions and with varying levels of strength.

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This article has been withdrawn at the request of the author(s) and/or editor. The Publisher apologizes for any inconvenience this may cause. The full Elsevier Policy on Article Withdrawal can be found at http://www.

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Quarantine: voluntary or not?

J Law Med Ethics

May 2005

Center for Law and the Public's Health, Georgetown Law Center, Johns Hopkins University, Baltimore, MD, USA.

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