Ebola

  • Read more: Ebola… again: What have we learned?

    Ebola… again: What have we learned?

    By Alicia Ely Yamin As Susan Sontag eloquently noted decades ago, illness conjures metaphors that reveal a great deal about how we think about, and, in turn, address them. None more so than the lethal Ebola, which monstrously disfigures bodies before killing the infected person and spreading rapidly through the routines of everyday life. In…

    Road sign that reads "Attention Ebola"
  • Read more: Innovation Gaps on Life Science Frontiers

    Innovation Gaps on Life Science Frontiers

    Join us in wonderful Copenhagen at our CeBIL Kick-Off Conference: ”Innovation Gaps on Life Science Frontiers? From Antimicrobial Resistance & the Bad Bugs to New Uses, AI & the Black Box”. The  Conference marks the start of the Novo Nordisk Foundation’s Collaborative Research Programme in Biomedical Innovation Law which is carried out within a unique…

  • Read more: Peeling the Onion: How to Promote Pharmaceutical Innovation and Access to Medicine

    Peeling the Onion: How to Promote Pharmaceutical Innovation and Access to Medicine

    By Timo Minssen As mentioned in my earlier blog post, I decided to conclude this year by publishing a introductory speech that I gave on April 14th, 2015 at the 2015 Broad Institute Innovation & Intellectual Property Symposium. The speech was part of the session “Bringing Therapies to the Patients” and introduced a panel-discussion with Entrepreneur and Professors of…

  • Read more: Happy New Year: From “Weltschmerz” to Pharmaceutical Innovation

    Happy New Year: From “Weltschmerz” to Pharmaceutical Innovation

    By Timo Minssen Dear readers and colleagues, I would like to take this opportunity to wish you all a very happy, healthy and peaceful year 2016. Reaching the end of 2015, I cannot stop thinking about the year that has passed. Being a native German, living in Sweden and commuting every week over the bridge to Copenhagen in Denmark…

  • Read more: Classifying Ebola as a National Security Threat

    Classifying Ebola as a National Security Threat

    At yesterday’s Third Annual Health Law Year in P/Review event hosted by the Petrie-Flom Center, George Annas, William Fairfield Warren Distinguished Professor of Health Law, Bioethics, and Human Rights at Boston University School of Public Health, discussed the legal and public health response to Ebola. One issue that he raised was that in response to…

  • Read more: Last Year Was A Wild One For Health Law — What’s On The Docket For 2015?

    Last Year Was A Wild One For Health Law — What’s On The Docket For 2015?

    By Greg Curfman, Holly Fernandez Lynch and I. Glenn Cohen This new blog post by Greg Curfman, Holly Fernandez Lynch and I. Glenn Cohen appears on the Health Affairs Blog: Everywhere we look, we see the tremendous impact of new legal developments—whether regulatory or statutory, federal or state—on health and health care. These topics range from insurance to intellectual…

  • Read more: 12/10/14 – Going Viral: Ebola and the Media

    12/10/14 – Going Viral: Ebola and the Media

    An upcoming event from our colleagues at the NYU Division of Medical Ethics – Going Viral – Ebola and the Media: Contagion, Quarantine, and Patient Care Wednesday, December 10th, 6 PM – 8 PM 20 Cooper Square, 7th Floor New York, NY 10003

  • Read more: The Ethics of Using Placebo Controls in Ebola Clinical Trials

    The Ethics of Using Placebo Controls in Ebola Clinical Trials

    [Blogger’s Note: I am very pleased to share this post by my colleague at Seton Hall Law, Carl Coleman. This post was cross-posted at Health Reform Watch.] By Carl H. Coleman With well over 5,000 global deaths from Ebola already reported, drug developers are working fast to begin human clinical trials of promising experimental treatments.  Earlier this month,…

  • Read more: Is Pregnancy a “Disability” in the Ebola Epidemic?

    Is Pregnancy a “Disability” in the Ebola Epidemic?

    By Kelsey Berry Much of the recent Ebola coverage has brought to the forefront principles of disaster triage and served as a reminder of the inescapability of rationing health care resources. A piece in The New Yorker recently highlighted the plight of pregnant women and their apparent exclusion from standard Ebola wards in Sierra Leone. Professor and Ethicist Nir…

  • Read more: European Responses to the Ebola Crisis: Initiatives at the European Medicines Agency (EMA)

    European Responses to the Ebola Crisis: Initiatives at the European Medicines Agency (EMA)

    By Timo Minssen The current Ebola outbreak already attracted much attention on “Bill of Health” resulting in some excellent blogs on a horrible topic. While it is evident that the current health crisis requires both immediate responses and more sustainable changes in health care policy, research and regulation, medicines regulators are collaborating internationally to find innovative…