89 results match your criteria: "University of Virginia School of Law.[Affiliation]"
bioRxiv
September 2023
Center for Economic and Social Research, University of Southern California, Los Angeles, CA, USA.
The effects of assortative mating (AM) on estimates from genetic studies has been receiving increasing attention in recent years. We extend existing AM theory to more general models of sorting and conclude that correct theory-based AM adjustments require knowledge of complicated, unknown historical sorting patterns. We propose a simple, general-purpose approach using polygenic indexes (PGIs).
View Article and Find Full Text PDFJ Public Health Manag Pract
May 2023
Division of Social and Economic Wellbeing, RAND Corporation, Arlington, Virginia (Drs Siddiqi, Uscher-Pines, and Chari); and University of Virginia School of Law, Charlottesville, Virginia (Ms Kareddy).
Context: Disaster citizen is the use of scientific methods by the public to address preparedness, response, or recovery needs. Disaster citizen science applications with public health relevance are growing in academic and community sectors, but integration with public health emergency preparedness, response, and recovery (PHEPRR) agencies is limited.
Objective: We examined how local health departments (LHDs) and community-based organizations have used citizen science to build public health preparedness and response (PHEP) capabilities.
J Med Philos
February 2023
University of Virginia School of Law, Charlottesville, VA, USA.
Philosophers have debated whether the advance directives of Alzheimer's patients should be enforced, even if patients seem content in their demented state. The debate raises deep questions about the nature of human autonomy and personal identity. But it tends to proceed on the assumption that the advance directive's terms are clear, whereas in practice they are often vague or ambiguous, requiring the patient's healthcare proxy to make difficult judgment calls.
View Article and Find Full Text PDFForensic Sci Int Synerg
March 2022
National Institute of Standards and Technology, Special Programs Office, 100 Bureau Drive, Gaithersburg, MD, 20899, USA.
Forensic Sci Int Synerg
December 2021
The Arson Research Project, Monterey College of Law, 100 Col. Durham Street, Seaside, CA, 93955, USA.
The success of forensic science depends heavily on human reasoning abilities. Although we typically navigate our lives well using those abilities, decades of psychological science research shows that human reasoning is not always rational. In addition, forensic science often demands that its practitioners reason in non-natural ways.
View Article and Find Full Text PDFContemp Clin Trials Commun
June 2022
Department of Radiation Oncology, University of Virginia School of Medicine, Charlottesville, VA, USA.
Clinical trials are essential for evaluating advanced technologies and treatment approaches involving radiation therapy to improve outcomes for cancer patients. Clinical trials at cancer centers with designation from the National Cancer Institute must undergo scientific review in additional to Institutional Review Board approval. Given the highly specialized nature and rapidly advancing technologies of radiation therapy, and the small number of radiation oncology investigators at some centers, a lack of radiation oncology expertise among reviewers may present challenges at some cancer centers.
View Article and Find Full Text PDFNeurology
January 2022
From the Department of Neurology (J.A.S.), University of Wisconsin, Madison; Department of Neurology (W.C.), University of California San Francisco; Institute of Law, Psychiatry and Public Policy (R.J.B.), University of Virginia School of Law, Charlottesville; Department of Anesthesiology and Critical Care Medicine (M.P.K.), University of Pennsylvania, Philadelphia; and Department of Neurology (J.A.R.), Lahey Hospital and Medical Center, Burlington, MA.
This position statement briefly reviews the principle of informed consent, the elements of decisional capacity, and how acute stroke may affect this capacity. It further reviews the role of surrogate decision-making, including advance directives, next of kin, physician orders for life-sustaining treatment, and guardianship. In some cases of acute stroke in which the patient lacks decisional capacity and no advance directives or surrogates are available, consent to treatment may be presumed.
View Article and Find Full Text PDFBMC Med Ethics
March 2022
North Carolina State University, 101 Lampe Drive (Withers Hall 453), Raleigh, NC, 27695, USA.
Background: Transcranial magnetic stimulation (TMS) is an FDA approved treatment for major depression, migraine, obsessive compulsive disorder, and smoking addiction. TMS has gained popular media support, but media coverage and commercial reporting of TMS services may be contributing to the landscape of ethical issues.
Methods: We explore the differences between the academic and print media literature portrayals of TMS to evaluate their ethical impact for the public.
J Law Med Ethics
December 2020
Hilary J. Higgins is a third-year law student at Yale Law School in New Haven, CT. She received her B.A. from Harvard College (2015) in Cambridge, MA. Jonathan E. Lowy, J.D., is Chief Counsel and Vice President of Legal at Brady United Against Gun Violence. He received his B.A. from Harvard College (1983) in Cambridge, MA, and his J.D. from the University of Virginia School of Law (1988) in Charlottesville, VA. Andrew J. Rising is a third-year law student at Yale Law School in New Haven, CT. He received his B.A. from the University of Michigan Gerald R. Ford School of Public Policy (2016) in Ann Arbor, MI.
The devastating toll of gun violence has given rise to hundreds of lawsuits seeking justice on behalf of victims and their families. A significant number of challenges against gun companies, however, are blocked by courts' broad reading of the Protection of Lawful Commerce in Arms Act (PLCAA) - a federal statute often interpreted to shield the gun industry from civil liability. This article reexamines PLCAA in light of the Supreme Court's recent federalism caselaw, which counsels courts to narrowly construe federal laws that could otherwise upset the balance of power between states and the federal government.
View Article and Find Full Text PDFPerspect Psychol Sci
May 2021
School of Psychology, University of New South Wales.
There has been extensive discussion about gender gaps in representation and career advancement in the sciences. However, psychological science itself has yet to be the focus of discussion or systematic review, despite our field's investment in questions of equity, status, well-being, gender bias, and gender disparities. In the present article, we consider 10 topics relevant for women's career advancement in psychological science.
View Article and Find Full Text PDFJ Community Psychol
August 2020
Duke University School of Law, Durham, North Carolina.
Prior research largely has explored judicial perceptions of risk assessment in sentencing. Little is known about how other court actors, specifically, prosecutors and defense attorneys, perceive risk assessments in the sentencing process. Here, we report a qualitative study on the use of risk assessment by prosecutors and defense attorneys in Virginia.
View Article and Find Full Text PDFAm J Law Med
May 2020
Deborah Hellman is David Lurton Massee, Jr. Professor of Law and Roy L. and Rosamond Woodruff Morgan Professor of Law at the University of Virginia School of Law.
Doctors have two ethical duties: to cure disease or ease suffering and, also, to do no harm. The ethical duty to "Do No Harm" has been used to justify two sides of a pendulum swing in the philosophy of opioid prescribing for pain. In the 1990s, it was invoked to expand prescribing, and more recently to justify dramatic reductions in prescription opioid use.
View Article and Find Full Text PDFBehav Sci Law
May 2020
University of Virginia School of Law, Charlottesville, VA, USA.
In this article, we focus on two highly problematic issues in the manner in which the First Step Act of 2018 is being implemented by the Bureau of Prisons: an uncritical separation of "dynamic risks" and "criminogenic needs"; and a spurious reliance on "evidence-based" interventions to reduce recidivism risk. We argue that if the Act is to live up to its promise of being a game-changing development in efforts to reduce crime while simultaneously shrinking mass incarceration, "needs assessment" must be subject to vastly increased empirical attention, variable and causal risk factors must be identified and validly assessed, and interventions to reduce risk must be rigorously evaluated both for their fidelity of implementation and impact on recidivism. Rather than further proliferating programs that ostensibly reduce risk, we believe that serious consideration should be given to the Bureau of Prisons offering one signature, well-established cognitive-behavioral program that can simultaneously address multiple risk factors for moderate and high-risk prisoners.
View Article and Find Full Text PDFNeurology
April 2020
From the Division of Neurology (J.A.R.), Lahey Hospital and Medical Center, Burlington, MA; Neurology Division (L.G.E.), Ann & Robert H. Lurie Children's Hospital of Chicago, IL; University of Virginia School of Law (R.J.B.), Charlottesville; Neurosciences Center (R.C.), NIH, Bethesda, MD; Department of Neurology (W.D.G.), Connecticut Children's Medical Center, Hartford; Department of Neurology (M.K.), The Children's Hospital of Philadelphia, PA; Department of Neurology (J.A.K.), Augusta University at the Medical College of Georgia; Inova Neuroscience and Spine Institute (D.G.L.), Falls Church, VA; Department of Neurology (R.M.P.), Indiana University School of Medicine, Indianapolis; Department of Neurology (M.R.), University of Nebraska Medical Center, Omaha; Department of Neurology (J.A.S.), University of Wisconsin School of Medicine and Public Health, Madison; Department of Neurology (Z.S.), Penn State Hershey Medical Center, PA; Departments of Neurology and Neurologic Surgery and Seattle Cancer Care Alliance (L.T.), UW Medicine; and Departments of Neurology and Neurological Surgery (M.A.W.), University of Washington Medical Center, Seattle.
Ann Intern Med
January 2020
Mitchell Hamline School of Law, Saint Paul, Minnesota (T.P.).
Research on risk assessment in sentencing has focused heavily on the role of judges. Ignoring the role of other courtroom actors in the sentencing process, however, leaves unexamined the potentially significant effects on judicial decision making of arguments made by prosecutors and defense attorneys at sentencing hearings. Unduly focusing on judges also overlooks the vast majority of sentences arrived at through negotiated guilty pleas.
View Article and Find Full Text PDFHealth Aff (Millwood)
October 2019
John Monahan is the John S. Shannon Distinguished Professor of Law at the University of Virginia School of Law, in Charlottesville.
Highly publicized acts of violence routinely spark reactions that place blame on the perpetrator's presumed mental illness. Despite solid evidence that people with mental illness are unlikely to be dangerous, such prejudice can lead to support for inappropriately using legal means to force people into treatment. We examined trends in public perceptions of violence and support for coerced treatment across a twenty-two-year period using data from three National Stigma Studies.
View Article and Find Full Text PDFJ Adolesc Health
October 2019
Philip R. Lee Institute for Health Policy Studies, University of California, San Francisco, San Francisco, California. Electronic address:
J Community Psychol
July 2019
University of Virginia School of Law, Charlottesville, Virginia.
Virginia's sentencing guidelines include alternative sanctions based on the use of a quantitative instrument called the Nonviolent Risk Assessment (NVRA) that identifies individuals convicted of drug and property crimes that are considered to be at lower risk of recidivism. Although nondispositive, the NVRA affords judges the discretion to grant alternative sentences to eligible low-risk defendants. In this study, we explore how judges make use of the NVRA instrument when sentencing individuals convicted of low-level drug and property crimes.
View Article and Find Full Text PDFBehav Sci Law
March 2019
Duke University School of Law, Durham, NC, USA.
Fingerprint examiners regularly participate in tests designed to assess their proficiency. These tests provide information relevant to the weight of fingerprint evidence, but no prior research has directly examined how jurors react to proficiency testing information. Using a nationally representative sample of American adults, we examined the impact of proficiency testing information on the weight given to the opinions of fingerprint examiners by mock jurors considering a hypothetical criminal case.
View Article and Find Full Text PDFJ Law Med Ethics
September 2018
B. Cameron Webb, M.D., J.D., is an Assistant Professor in the University of Virginia School of Medicine, where he is the Director of Health Policy and Equity for the Department of Public Health Sciences and a Hospitalist in the Department of Medicine. Dayna Bowen Matthew, J.D., Ph.D., is the William L. Matheson and Robert M. Morgenthau Distinguished Professor of Law and the F. Palmer Weber Research Professor of Civil Liberties and Human Rights at the University of Virginia School of Law. She holds an appointment in the School of Medicine's Department of Public Health Sciences.
"Medicalization" has been a contentious notion since its introduction centuries ago. While some scholars lamented a medical overreach into social domains, others hailed its promise for social justice advocacy. Against the backdrop of a growing commitment to health equity across the nation, this article reviews historical interpretations of medicalization, offers an application of the term to non-biologic risk factors for disease, and presents the case of housing the demonstrate the great potential of medicalizing poverty.
View Article and Find Full Text PDFBehav Sci Law
September 2018
University of Virginia School of Law, Charlottesville, VA, USA.
The assessment of an offender's risk of recidivism is emerging as a key consideration in sentencing policy in many US jurisdictions. However, little information is available on how actual sentencing judges view this development. This study surveys the views of a population sample of judges in Virginia, the state that has gone further than any other in legislatively mandating risk assessment for certain drug and property offenders.
View Article and Find Full Text PDFForensic Sci Int
August 2018
Houston Forensic Science Center, 1301 Fannin St, Ste 170, Houston, TX 77002, United States.
Latent print examination traditionally follows the ACE-V process, in which latent prints are first analyzed to determine whether they are suitable for comparison, and then compared to an exemplar and evaluated for similarities and differences. Despite standard operating procedures and quality controls designed, in part, to mitigate differences between examiners, latent print processing and review are inherently subjective. The ACE-V process addresses subjectivity, and the possibility of error, in the verification stage in which a second examiner repeats the analysis, comparison, and evaluation steps in a given case.
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