Public Health Law Research

  • Read more: National Conference on HIV Criminalization

    National Conference on HIV Criminalization

    By Sterling Johnson, JD Grinnell College in Iowa will host the first National Conference on HIV Criminalization next week, June 2-5 on its campus. One of the stated goals of the conference will be to discuss the recent legislative changes in Iowa and how to apply the lessons to other states with laws that apply…

  • Read more: Research Round-Up: New Publications from the PHLR SciVal Experts Community

    Research Round-Up: New Publications from the PHLR SciVal Experts Community

    By Scott Burris In honor of last week’s National Public Health Week, we have a lot of fresh, new PHLR. The latest crop of papers from public health law researchers touch on a number of important points and issues including transportation safety, implementation, tobacco control, and media presentation of public health law. Check out Scott…

  • Read more: New regulatory pathways and incentives for sustainable antibiotics: Recent European & US Initiatives

    New regulatory pathways and incentives for sustainable antibiotics: Recent European & US Initiatives

    By Timo Minssen Please find attached a ppt presentation on “New regulatory pathways and incentives for sustainable antibiotics: Recent European & US Initiatives” given on March 7, 2014 at the Broad Institute of MIT and Harvard.  The presentation was followed by a discussion moderated by US patent attorney Melissa Hunter-Ensor, Partner at Saul Ewing, Boston. I…

  • Read more: Happy Public Health Week: “We’re Good Enough, We’re Smart Enough, and Doggone It, People Like Us”

    Happy Public Health Week: “We’re Good Enough, We’re Smart Enough, and Doggone It, People Like Us”

    By Scott Burris We may be living in a golden age of group-think. A weekly reminder is poor Paul Krugman railing against the apparently universal belief in America and Europe that we’ve got to cut budgets right now or disaster will strike. He calls this a Zombie idea, a false claim that has been falsified…

  • Read more: Birth Control for Men?

    Birth Control for Men?

    By Dov Fox We’re not talking vasectomies or condoms. Medical Daily reports that the NIH has awarded a $4.7 million grant to come up with a “Pill” for men. Most previous attempts to develop such contraceptives used testosterone to reduce the number of sperm men produce. This one takes aim at its mobility instead, using a non-hormonal compound that…

  • Read more: Flu Vaccine Mandates for Health Care Workers

    Flu Vaccine Mandates for Health Care Workers

    By Temple University Center for Public Health Law Research According to officials, the worst of this year’s devastating flu season should be over in most parts of the country. But in early January, the flu had hit 47 of 50 states. According to the CDC, a total of 78 influenza-associated pediatric deaths have been reported….

  • Read more: Reducing Gun Violence in America

    Reducing Gun Violence in America

    By Temple University Center for Public Health Law Research Typically, we would avoid such a shameless plug for our researchers — we’d be a little more subtle. But, we can’t help it this time. This book is the best $10 you’ll spend all year. A little less than a month ago, Johns Hopkins University convened…

  • Read more: PHLR Annual Meeting Post-Mortem

    PHLR Annual Meeting Post-Mortem

    By Temple University Center for Public Health Law Research This past week, PHLR hosted 150 researchers, lawyers, public health practitioners and others for our fourth annual meeting. With our theme for the conference in mind, “Driving Legal Innovation,” our attendees shared results of evaluations of laws and regulations, offered up suggestions for new ways to…

  • Read more: Ohio Joins In

    Ohio Joins In

    By Hosea H. Harvey, JD, PhD Last week, Ohio joined the vast majority of states that have enacted laws designed to reduce long-term health consequences for youth athletes who suffer concussions (technically, traumatic brain injuries or TBIs) in organized youth sports activities.  Based on my research for an upcoming article “Reducing Traumatic Brain Injuries in…

  • Read more: Preventing Teen Crashes with Stickers

    Preventing Teen Crashes with Stickers

    By Scott Burris Graduated Drivers’ License Laws have apparently been a major success in reducing crashes among novice drivers. (A couple of studies have suggested the laws might just be postponing crashes, but so far that hypothesis remains unproved, and the weight of expert opinion seems to be that the association is spurious.)  There has…