health law policy

  • Read more: No room for complacency in patient safety in the NHS

    No room for complacency in patient safety in the NHS

    By John Tingle Matt Hancock, the recently appointed Government, Health and Social Care Secretary, made a keynote speech on patient safety in London recently. The speech spelled out the future direction of NHS (National Health Service) patient safety policy development in England and also contained some very useful observations and policy which have relevance to…

    health secretary matt hancock leaves 10 downing street
  • Read more: Cottage Food and Food Freedom Laws – New LawAtlas data

    Cottage Food and Food Freedom Laws – New LawAtlas data

    By Temple University Center for Public Health Law Research The newest map on LawAtlas.org analyzes state laws governing the production, sale, and regulation of cottage food operations. Typically, commercial food production is required to take place in certified commercial kitchens that are heavily regulated. Cottage foods laws regulate the production and sale of certain foods…

  • Read more: DNA Donors Must Demand Stronger Privacy Protection

    DNA Donors Must Demand Stronger Privacy Protection

    By Mason Marks and Tiffany Li An earlier version of this article was published in STAT. The National Institutes of Health wants your DNA, and the DNA of one million other Americans, for an ambitious project called All of Us. Its goal — to “uncover paths toward delivering precision medicine” — is a good one….

  • Read more: A data set that looks like America

    A data set that looks like America

    By Oliver Kim May marks the annual Asian American and Pacific Islander Heritage Month, which recognizes the history and contributions of this diverse population in the United States. Accounting for that diversity though is one of the challenges facing the Asian American-Pacific Islander (AAPI) community: for example, the Library of Congress commemorative website recognizes that…

  • Read more: Facebook Should ‘First Do No Harm’ When Collecting Health Data

    Facebook Should ‘First Do No Harm’ When Collecting Health Data

    By Mason Marks Following the Cambridge Analytica scandal, it was reported that Facebook planned to partner with medical organizations to obtain health records on thousands of users. The plans were put on hold when news of the scandal broke. But Facebook doesn’t need medical records to derive health data from its users. It can use…

  • Read more: New Article Examines the Possibility of Applying Workplace Safety Rules to the NFL

    New Article Examines the Possibility of Applying Workplace Safety Rules to the NFL

    Part of the Law and Ethics Initiative of the Football Players Health Study at Harvard University: Article authored by Adam M. Finkel, Chris Deubert, Orly Lobel, I. Glenn Cohen (Faculty Director), and Holly Fernandez Lynch (Former Executive Director Could occupational health and safety laws be applied to better protect NFL players? A new analysis, published on April…

  • Read more: The Health Service Ombudsman: NHS Failing Patients with Mental Health Problems

    The Health Service Ombudsman: NHS Failing Patients with Mental Health Problems

    By John Tingle Failings in National Health Service (NHS) care for patients with mental health problems is a worryingly persistent story in the English media. Many reports show harrowing and dramatic failings in NHS care provision for the mentally ill some of which result in avoidable deaths.The Health Service Ombudsman  (HSO) represents the final stage…

  • Read more: Systemic Oversight: a new approach for precision medicine and digital health

    Systemic Oversight: a new approach for precision medicine and digital health

    By Alessandro Blasimme and Effy Vayena Imagine a clinical research protocol to test the efficacy of a nutritional regime on the aging trajectory of the participants. Such a study would need to be highly powered and include thousands of people in order to observe a credible effect size. Participants would remain enrolled in the study for…

  • Read more: Failings in care for patients being treated under the Mental Health Act 1983

    Failings in care for patients being treated under the Mental Health Act 1983

    By John Tingle The Care Quality Commission (CQC)  is the independent regulator of health and social care in England and they have recently produced their annual report to Parliament on how health services are applying the Mental Health Act 1983 (MHA) .This report, shines a very strong light on failing health care practices in mental health…

  • Read more: Learning the lessons from patient safety errors of the past

    Learning the lessons from patient safety errors of the past

    By John Tingle A common theme found in patient safety reports in England going back as far as the year 2000 is that the NHS (National Health Service) is poor at learning lessons from previous adverse health incident reports and of changing practice. The seminal report on patient safety in England, Organisation with a memory…