32 results match your criteria: "University of California Hastings College of the Law[Affiliation]"

In US health policy, conventional wisdom holds that market competition and price regulation are mutually exclusive strategies to stem high and rising provider prices. This incorrect assumption centers on the belief that robust competition in US commercial health insurance markets must include provider price competition. Other developed countries, however, commonly implement price regulation to support competition over important care delivery components other than prices, including quality of care and patient choice, and to provide stronger incentives for providers to improve operating efficiency.

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States can challenge proposed hospital mergers by using antitrust laws to prevent anticompetitive harms. This observational study examined additional state laws-principally charitable trust, nonprofit corporation, health and safety, and certificate-of-need laws-that can serve as complements and substitutes for antitrust laws by empowering states to be notified of, review, and challenge proposed hospital mergers through administrative processes. During the period 2010-19, 862 hospital mergers were proposed, but only forty-two (4.

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State Public Option Plans - Too Modest to Improve Affordability?

N Engl J Med

September 2021

From Georgia State University College of Law, Atlanta (E.C.F.B.); the University of California Hastings College of the Law, San Francisco (K.L.G.); and the University of Auckland, Auckland Law School, Auckland, New Zealand (J.S.K.).

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Evidence of memory from brain data.

J Law Biosci

December 2020

Psychology and Psychiatry & Biobehavioral Sciences, University of California, Los Angeles.

Much courtroom evidence relies on assessing witness memory. Recent advances in brain imaging analysis techniques offer new information about the nature of autobiographical memory and introduce the potential for brain-based memory detection. In particular, the use of powerful machine-learning algorithms reveals the limits of technological capacities to detect true memories and contributes to existing psychological understanding that all memory is potentially flawed.

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Employer-Mandated Vaccination for COVID-19.

Am J Public Health

June 2021

Mark A. Rothstein is with Institute for Bioethics, Health Policy and Law, University of Louisville School of Medicine, Louisville, KY. Wendy E. Parmet is with School of Law, Northeastern University, Boston, MA. Dorit Rubinstein Reiss is with University of California Hastings College of the Law, San Francisco. Wendy E. Parmet is also an AJPH associate editor.

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This article draws on a broadcast popular among the anti-vaccine community to map out six themes used by the broadcast to mislead viewers about COVID-19. The themes are the claim that "they" - government and pharma - are lying to you, claims that COVID-19 is an excuse to remove civil liberties, viewing everyone as an expert, claiming that science cannot save us, skewing the science, and a claim that "they" are out to harm the viewers. The article points out that similar themes are used to mislead followers with anti-vaccine information.

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Introduction: Nurses play a significant role in ensuring the safety and quality of drugs. Our aim was to assess significant factors in nurses' participation in ensuring pharmacotherapy safety by reporting adverse drug reactions (ADR) and detecting substandard drugs (SD).

Materials And Methods: The study was a cross-sectional, comparative survey, using original questionnaires.

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The California drug transparency bill (SB-17), signed into law in October 2017, seeks to promote transparency in pharmaceutical pricing, enhance understanding about pharmaceutical pricing trends, and assist in managing pharmaceutical costs. This article examines the legal and regulatory aspects of SB-17, explores legal challenges to the law, compares it to other state efforts to address rising drug prices, and discusses how California can maximize the impact of SB-17 by coupling the law with other incentives. While SB-17 might not significantly reduce drug prices, the new law represents a meaningful step for one state seeking to negotiate the political and legal boundaries of state action to rein in drug prices.

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Current Regulation of Mobile Mental Health Applications.

J Am Acad Psychiatry Law

June 2018

Dr. Armontrout is a Staff Psychiatrist, VA Palo Alto Health Care System, Palo Alto, CA. Dr. Torous is Co-Director of the Digital Psychiatry Program, Beth Israel Deaconess Medical Center Department of Psychiatry, Harvard Medical School, Boston, MA. Ms. Cohen is Professor of Law, University of California Hastings College of the Law, San Francisco, CA. Dr. McNiel is Professor of Clinical Psychology and Dr. Binder is Professor of Psychiatry, Department of Psychiatry, University of California, San Francisco, San Francisco, CA.

In recent years, the availability of software that is targeted toward the general public and designed to assist in the diagnosis and treatment of mental illness or to promote general mental health has expanded greatly. Regulation of more traditional health care providers and health care-associated devices is well established by statute, regulatory guidelines, and common law precedents. Applications (apps), in contrast, pose a novel regulatory challenge.

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The ability to accurately predict violence and other forms of serious antisocial behavior would provide important societal benefits, and there is substantial enthusiasm for the potential predictive accuracy of neuroimaging techniques. Here, we review the current status of violence prediction using actuarial and clinical methods, and assess the current state of neuroprediction. We then outline several questions that need to be addressed by future studies of neuroprediction if neuroimaging and other neuroscientific markers are to be successfully translated into public policy.

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The role of human rights litigation in improving access to reproductive health care and achieving reductions in maternal mortality.

BMC Pregnancy Childbirth

November 2017

UCSF/UC Hastings Consortium on Law, Science & Health Policy, San Francisco, CA, USA.

Background: Improving maternal health, reducing global maternal mortality, and working toward universal access to reproductive health care are global priorities for United Nations agencies, national governments, and civil society organizations. Human rights lawyers have joined this global movement, using international law and domestic constitutions to hold nations accountable for preventable maternal death and for failing to provide access to reproductive health care services.

Case Presentation: This article discusses three decisions in which international treaty bodies find the nations of Brazil and Peru responsible for violations of the Convention on the Elimination of All Forms of Discrimination Against Women and the International Covenant on Civil and Political Rights and also two domestic decisions alleging constitutional violations in India and Uganda.

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Several forensic sciences, especially of the pattern-matching kind, are increasingly seen to lack the scientific foundation needed to justify continuing admission as trial evidence. Indeed, several have been abolished in the recent past. A likely next candidate for elimination is bitemark identification.

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Universities and Patent Demands.

J Law Biosci

November 2015

Harry and Lillian Hastings Professor of Law and Director of the Institute for Innovation Law, University of California Hastings College of the Law.

Research universities have made enormous contributions to the field of medicine and the treatment of human disease. Alone or in collaboration with pharmaceutical companies, academic researchers have added to the store of knowledge that has led to numerous life science breakthroughs. A new chapter may be opening for academic researchers, however, that could lead to a darker tale.

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My Obstetrician Got Me Fired: How Work Notes Can Harm Pregnant Patients and What to Do About It.

Obstet Gynecol

August 2015

Department of Obstetrics, Gynecology and Reproductive Sciences, University of California, San Francisco, San Francisco, California; the Department of Obstetrics & Gynecology, University of Utah School of Medicine, Salt Lake City, Utah; and the University of California Hastings College of the Law, San Francisco, California.

Prenatal care providers are frequently asked to provide employment notes for their patients requesting medical leave or changes to work duties. Writing employment notes correctly can help patients negotiate for and obtain medically indicated workplace accommodations, allowing them to continue to work and earn an income. However, a poorly written or poorly timed note can jeopardize a patient's employment and salary.

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Crime, punishment, and the American criminal justice system.

J Am Acad Psychiatry Law

March 2015

Dr. Blinder is Past Clinical Professor of Psychiatry, University of California San Francisco, and Past Adjunct Professor of Law, University of California Hastings College of the Law, San Francisco, CA.

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