recent publications

  • Read more: Patient Safety at the Crossroads

    Patient Safety at the Crossroads

    By John Tingle The NHS (National Health Service) in the UK is 70 next year: it was founded on 5th July 1948 and celebrations are being planned. Clearly a lot has changed since it was founded. Our concept of wellness has changed, we go to the doctor for reasons that would never have been considered…

  • Read more: The Problematic Patchwork of State Medical Marijuana Laws – New Research

    The Problematic Patchwork of State Medical Marijuana Laws – New Research

    By Abraham Gutman The legal status of medical marijuana in the United States is unique. On one hand, the Controlled Substance Act of 1970 classifies marijuana as a Schedule I drug with no acceptable medical use and high potential for abuse. On the other hand, as of February 1, 2017, 27 states and the District of…

  • Read more: Factory farming, human health, and the new WHO Director General

    Factory farming, human health, and the new WHO Director General

    By Nir Eyal Last week, over 200 experts called on the next Director General of the World Health Organization to prioritize factory farming in an open letter. Announced in articles in the New York Times and The Lancet, the letter argues that factory farming is a major barrier to better global health. The letter does not make this argument…

  • Read more: Reflection and Review at The National Health Service Litigation Authority (NHS LA)

    Reflection and Review at The National Health Service Litigation Authority (NHS LA)

    By John Tingle The NHS LA is a pivotal organisations in the NHS whose work has a daily impact on the lives of patients and on all those who work in the health service. The NHS LA  have recently published its new five year strategy which reveals some very interesting and informative data, trends, insights…

  • Read more: Housing Equity Week in Review

    Housing Equity Week in Review

    By Temple University Center for Public Health Law Research We’ve rounded up the latest news from the past week, January 9-15, 2017, for housing law and equity. The HUD confirmation hearing was, of course, the biggest news, but a few other items of note: Statement of Diane Yentel of the National Low Income Housing Coalition…

  • Read more: Prior Authorization Policies for Pediatric ADHD Medication Prescriptions

    Prior Authorization Policies for Pediatric ADHD Medication Prescriptions

    By Temple University Center for Public Health Law Research According to the Centers for Disease Control and Prevention, more than 6.4 million US children 4-17 years old have been diagnosed with attention-deficit/hyperactivity disorder (ADHD). The percentage of US children diagnosed with ADHD has increased by 3-5 percent per year since the 1990s. Relatedly, the percentage…

  • Read more: Variability of US State Workplace Wellness Program Laws

    Variability of US State Workplace Wellness Program Laws

    By Temple University Center for Public Health Law Research A team of researchers led by Jennifer Pomeranz, JD, MPH, Clinical Assistant Professor of the College of Global Public Health at New York University, have released a new set of resources that detail characteristics of laws related to workplace wellness programs and identify trends in these…

  • Read more: Sequenom vs. Ariosa and international approaches to the patent eligibility of biomedical innovation

    Sequenom vs. Ariosa and international approaches to the patent eligibility of biomedical innovation

    By Timo Minssen With a potential petition for writ of certiorari in the Sequenom v. Ariosa case approaching, it appears as if the US Supreme Court  will once again have to consider crucial patent eligibility questions with a great significance for biomedical innovation and diagnostic methods. The claims at issue (see U.S. Patent No. 6,258,540 ) are directed to methods of genetic testing by detecting and…

  • Read more: Changing How We Think (and Talk) About Public Health Law

    Changing How We Think (and Talk) About Public Health Law

    By Scott Burris, JD Marice Ashe, Donna Levin, Matthew Penn, Michelle Larkin and I have a new piece in the Annual Review of Public Health (also available on SSRN). We set out a “transdisciplinary model of public health law” that encompasses within the core of the field both the traditional public health law practice of…

  • Read more: The Impact of Broccoli II and Tomato II on European patents in conventional breeding, GMO’s and Synthetic Biology: A grand finale of a juicy patents tale?

    The Impact of Broccoli II and Tomato II on European patents in conventional breeding, GMO’s and Synthetic Biology: A grand finale of a juicy patents tale?

    By Timo Minssen I am pleased to announce our recent paper entitled “The Impact of Broccoli II & Tomato II on European patents in conventional breeding, GMO’s and Synthetic Biology: The grand finale of a juicy patents tale?”, which is available on SSRN, and forthcoming in Biotechnology Law Report, Vol. 34, Number 3 (June 2015), pp. 1-18….