27 results match your criteria: "Indiana University Robert H. McKinney School of Law[Affiliation]"

CANNABIS LEGALIZATION IN STATE LEGISLATURES: PUBLIC HEALTH OPPORTUNITY AND RISK.

Marquette Law Rev

January 2020

Professor of Medicine, Truth Initiative Distinguished Professor of Tobacco Control, Center for Tobacco Control Research and Education, Philip R. Lee Institute for Health Policy Studies, and Department of Medicine, University of California San Francisco; Ph.D., Stanford University.

Cannabis is widely used in the U.S. and internationally despite its illicit status, but that illicit status is changing.

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Green tea extracts containing epigallocatechin-3-gallate modulate facial development in Down syndrome.

Sci Rep

February 2021

GREAB-Research Group in Biological Anthropology, Department of Evolutionary Biology, Ecology and Environmental Sciences (BEECA), Universitat de Barcelona (UB), Barcelona, Spain.

Trisomy of human chromosome 21 (Down syndrome, DS) alters development of multiple organ systems, including the face and underlying skeleton. Besides causing stigmata, these facial dysmorphologies can impair vital functions such as hearing, breathing, mastication, and health. To investigate the therapeutic potential of green tea extracts containing epigallocatechin-3-gallate (GTE-EGCG) for alleviating facial dysmorphologies associated with DS, we performed an experimental study with continued pre- and postnatal treatment with two doses of GTE-EGCG supplementation in a mouse model of DS, and an observational study of children with DS whose parents administered EGCG as a green tea supplement.

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An ethics framework for consolidating and prioritizing COVID-19 clinical trials.

Clin Trials

April 2021

Department of Medical Ethics and Health Policy, Perelman School of Medicine, University of Pennsylvania, Philadelphia, PA, USA.

Given the dearth of established safe and effective interventions to respond to COVID-19, there is an urgent ethical imperative to conduct meaningful clinical research. The good news is that interventions to be tested are not in short supply. Unfortunately, the human and material resources needed to conduct these trials are finite.

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The Moral Economy of Fertility Markets: Hope and Hype, History, and Inclusion.

J Law Med Ethics

December 2020

Seema Mohapatra, M.P.H., J.D., is Associate Professor of Law and Dean's Fellow, Indiana University Robert H. McKinney School of Law Dov Fox, L.L.M., J.D., D.Phil., is Professor of Law; Herzog Endowed Scholar; Director, Center for Health Law Policy & Bioethics, University of San Diego School of Law.

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The Legal Response to COVID-19: Legal Pathways to a More Effective and Equitable Response.

J Public Health Manag Pract

December 2020

Center for Public Health Law Research, Temple University Beasley School of Law, Philadelphia, Pennsylvania (Mr Burris); ChangeLab Solutions, Oakland, California (Ms de Guia); Wayne State University Law School, Detroit, Michigan (Mr Gable); Network for Public Health Law, Edina, Minnesota (Mr Levin); Center for Health Policy and Law, Northeastern University School of Law, Boston, Massachusetts (Mr Parmet); and Indiana University Robert H. McKinney School of Law, Indianapolis, Indiana (Mr Terry).

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Massage perceptions and attitudes of undergraduate pre-professional health sciences students: a cross-sectional survey in one U.S. university.

BMC Complement Med Ther

July 2020

Department of Health Sciences, School of Health and Human Sciences, Indiana University - IUPUI, 1050 Wishard Blvd, Indianapolis, IN, 46202, USA.

Background: Attitudes and beliefs about massage therapy have been explored among health professionals and health profession students, but not for undergraduate preprofessional health sciences students.

Methods: This cross-sectional survey sought to determine pre-professional health students' attitudes and perceptions toward massage therapy and determine the extent demographic variables such as age, gender, race, along with lifetime massage experience are associated with neutral/negative perceptions.

Results: N = 129 undergraduate students completed the Attitudes Toward Massage scale and 7 supplemental items pertaining to sexuality and therapist gender preference along with questions regarding lifetime massage utilization.

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Ensuring Uptake of Vaccines against SARS-CoV-2.

N Engl J Med

October 2020

From Stanford Law School and Stanford Health Policy and the Department of Medicine, Stanford University School of Medicine, Stanford, CA (M.M.M.); the Department of Health Policy and Management, Indiana University Richard M. Fairbanks School of Public Health, and the Indiana University Robert H. McKinney School of Law, Indianapolis (R.D.S.); and the Yale Institute for Global Health and the Yale Schools of Medicine, Public Health, and Nursing, New Haven, CT (S.B.O.).

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This article addresses the data protection and product safety regulatory models currently applied to consumer-facing health technologies. It explains how the design and structures of existing data protection and safety regulation in the U.S.

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Federal Indian Law as a Structural Determinant of Health.

J Law Med Ethics

December 2019

Aila Hoss, J.D., is a Visiting Assistant Professor at Indiana University Robert H. McKinney School of Law. Her research explores topics in public health law, health policy development, and the impact of federal Indian law and Tribal law on health outcomes. Prior to joining the faculty at IU, Aila served as a staff attorney for the Centers for Disease Control and Prevention's Public Health Law Program, where she worked to improve public health through the development of legal tools and the provision of legal technical assistance to state, Tribal, local, and territorial governments. Aila completed her B.A. at Emory University and her J.D. at the University of Oregon. She is an active member of the Indiana bar. She calls Indianapolis and Atlanta home and is Iranian-American.

Federal Indian law is the body of law that defines the rights, responsibilities, and relationships between three sovereigns, Tribes, states, and the federal government. This area of law has defined, oftentimes poorly, the contours of treaty rights, criminal and civil jurisdiction, economic development, among other issues. Much has been documented in terms of the implications of social, legal, political, and economic systems that perpetuate inequities amongst American Indian and Alaska Native populations.

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Feminist Perspectives in Health Law.

J Law Med Ethics

December 2019

Seema Mohapatra, J.D., M.P.H., is an Associate Professor of Law and Dean's Fellow at Indiana University Robert H. McKinney School of Law. Lindsay F. Wiley, J.D., M.P.H., is a Professor of Law and Director of the Health Law and Policy Program at American University Washington College of Law.

This essay argues that feminist legal theory offers an important, and underutilized, perspective to examine health law and policy. We use several theoretical frameworks developed by feminist legal theorists including relational autonomy, intersectionality, vulnerability theory, and the feminist critique of the public-private divide to demonstrate the utility of these theories to health law analysis. These frameworks provide insights relevant not only to issues that obviously relate to gender, but also to matters of choice, quality, and access that are less obviously gender-related.

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A cross-sectional analysis of human papillomavirus (HPV) vaccine statutes and regulations from states and the District of Columbia in the United States (U.S.) was conducted from September-November 2018 to advance analyses of policy impact on HPV vaccination uptake.

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Association of State Laws With Influenza Vaccination of Hospital Personnel.

Am J Prev Med

June 2019

Division of Healthcare Quality Promotion, National Center for Emerging Infectious and Zoonotic Diseases, Centers for Disease Control and Prevention, Atlanta, Georgia.

Introduction: Healthcare personnel influenza vaccination can reduce influenza illness and patient mortality. State laws are one tool promoting healthcare personnel influenza vaccination.

Methods: A 2016 legal assessment in 50 states and Washington DC identified (1) assessment laws: mandating hospitals assess healthcare personnel influenza vaccination status; (2) offer laws: mandating hospitals offer influenza vaccination to healthcare personnel; (3) ensure laws: mandating hospitals require healthcare personnel to demonstrate proof of influenza vaccination; and (4) surgical masking laws: mandating unvaccinated healthcare personnel to wear surgical masks during influenza season.

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As pediatric biobank research grows, additional guidance will be needed about whether researchers should always obtain consent from participants when they reach the legal age of majority. Biobanks struggle with a range of practical and ethical issues related to this question. We propose a framework for the use of anticipatory waivers of consent that is empirically rooted in research that shows that children and adolescents are often developmentally capable of meaningful deliberation about the risks and benefits of participation in research.

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Predicting pharmacy naloxone stocking and dispensing following a statewide standing order, Indiana 2016.

Drug Alcohol Depend

July 2018

Indiana University School of Public Health-Bloomington, 1025 E. 7th St., Bloomington, IN 47405, USA; Indiana Prevention Research Center, Indiana University,501 N. Morton St. Suite 110, Bloomington, IN 47404, USA; Institute for Research on Addictive Behavior, Indiana University, 501 N. Morton St. Suite 104, Bloomington, IN 47404, USA.

Background: While naloxone, the overdose reversal medication, has been available for decades, factors associated with its availability through pharmacies remain unclear. Studies suggest that policy and pharmacist beliefs may impact availability. Indiana passed a standing order law for naloxone in 2015 to increase access to naloxone.

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Regulating mobile mental health apps.

Behav Sci Law

March 2018

Department of Psychiatry, Indiana University School of Medicine, Indianapolis, IN, USA.

Mobile medical apps (MMAs) are a fast-growing category of software typically installed on personal smartphones and wearable devices. A subset of MMAs are aimed at helping consumers identify mental states and/or mental illnesses. Although this is a fledgling domain, there are already enough extant mental health MMAs both to suggest a typology and to detail some of the regulatory issues they pose.

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Mobile health (mHealth) combines the decentralization of health care with patient centeredness. Mature mHealth applications (apps) and services could provide actionable information, coaching, or alerts at a fraction of the cost of conventional health care. Different categories of apps attract diverse safety and privacy regulation.

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Abortion and compelled physician speech.

J Law Med Ethics

December 2016

Samuel R. Rosen Professor and Co-Director at the Hall Center for Law and Health, Indiana University Robert H. McKinney School of Law, and an Adjunct Professor of Medicine at the Indiana University School of Medicine.

Informed consent mandates for abortion providers may infringe the First Amendment's freedom of speech. On the other hand, they may reinforce the physician's duty to obtain informed consent. Courts can promote both doctrines by ensuring that compelled physician speech pertains to medical facts about abortion rather than abortion ideology and that compelled speech is truthful and not misleading.

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In the 13 years since their promulgation, the Health Insurance Portability and Accountability Act (HIPAA) rules and their enforcement have shown considerable evolution, as has the context within which they operate. Increasingly, it is the health information circulating outside the HIPAA-protected zone that is concerning: big data based on HIPAA data that have been acquired by public health agencies and then sold; medically inflected data collected from transactions or social media interactions; and the health data curated by patients, such as personal health records or data stored on smartphones. HIPAA does little here, suggesting that the future of health privacy may well be at the state level unless technology or federal legislation can catch up with state-of-the-art privacy regimes, such as the latest proposals from the European Commission.

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