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1.
J Law Med Ethics ; 51(3): 694-697, 2023.
Article in English | MEDLINE | ID: mdl-38088621

ABSTRACT

The emerging global climate crisis threatens human health in unprecedented ways, yet global health concerns have not been sufficiently considered within international climate change efforts. A more collaborative pathway could advance efforts to mitigate and adapt to climate change while protecting public health and social justice.


Subject(s)
Global Health , Social Justice , Humans , Climate Change , Public Health
2.
Article in English | MEDLINE | ID: mdl-37681792

ABSTRACT

The public health emergency caused by the COVID-19 pandemic stimulated stakeholders from diverse disciplines and institutions to establish new collaborations to produce informed public health responses to the disease. Wastewater-based epidemiology for COVID-19 grew quickly during the pandemic and required the rapid implementation of such collaborations. The objective of this article is to describe the challenges and results of new relationships developed in Detroit, MI, USA among a medical school and an engineering college at an academic institution (Wayne State University), the local health department (Detroit Health Department), and an environmental services company (LimnoTech) to utilize markers of the COVID-19 virus, SARS-CoV-2, in wastewater for the goal of managing COVID-19 outbreaks. Our collaborative team resolved questions related to sewershed selection, communication of results, and public health responses and addressed technical challenges that included ground-truthing the sewer maps, overcoming supply chain issues, improving the speed and sensitivity of measurements, and training new personnel to deal with a new disease under pandemic conditions. Recognition of our complementary roles and clear communication among the partners enabled city-wide wastewater data to inform public health responses within a few months of the availability of funding in 2020, and to make improvements in sensitivity and understanding to be made as the pandemic progressed and evolved. As a result, the outbreaks of COVID-19 in Detroit in fall and winter 2021-2022 (corresponding to Delta and Omicron variant outbreaks) were tracked in 20 sewersheds. Data comparing community- and hospital-associated sewersheds indicate a one- to two-week advance warning in the community of subsequent peaks in viral markers in hospital sewersheds. The new institutional relationships impelled by the pandemic provide a good basis for continuing collaborations to utilize wastewater-based human and pathogen data for improving the public health in the future.


Subject(s)
COVID-19 , Communicable Diseases , Humans , Public Health , Private Sector , Wastewater , Pandemics , SARS-CoV-2 , COVID-19/epidemiology
4.
J Law Med Ethics ; 50(3): 409-424, 2022.
Article in English | MEDLINE | ID: mdl-36398651

ABSTRACT

Despite a recent wave in global recognition of the rights of transgender and gender-diverse populations, referred to in this text by the umbrella label of trans*, international law continues to presume a cisgender binary definition of gender - dismissing the lived realities of trans* individuals throughout the world. This gap in international legal recognition and protection has fundamental implications for health, where trans* persons have been and continue to be subjected to widespread discrimination in health care, longstanding neglect of health needs, and significant violations of bodily autonomy.


Subject(s)
Right to Health , Transgender Persons , Humans , International Law , Gender Identity , Human Rights
7.
J Law Biosci ; 7(1): lsaa039, 2020.
Article in English | MEDLINE | ID: mdl-32793373

ABSTRACT

Scientists have observed that molecular markers for COVID-19 can be detected in wastewater of infected communities both during an outbreak and, in some cases, before the first case is confirmed. The Centers for Disease Control and Prevention and other government entities are considering whether to add community surveillance through wastewater monitoring to assist in tracking disease prevalence and guiding public health responses to the COVID-19 pandemic. This scientific breakthrough may lead to many useful potential applications for tracking disease, intensifying testing, initiating social distancing or quarantines, and even lifting restrictions once a cessation of infection is detected and confirmed. Yet, new technologies developed in response to a public health crisis may raise difficult legal and ethical questions about how such technologies may impact both the public health and civil liberties of the population. This paper describes recent scientific evidence regarding COVID-19 detection in wastewater, identifying public health benefits that may result from this breakthrough, as well as the limitations of existing data. The paper then assesses the legal and ethical implications of implementing policy based on positive sewage signals. It concludes that the first step to implementing legal and ethical wastewater monitoring is to develop scientific understanding. Even if reliability and efficacy are established, limits on sample and data collection, use, and sharing must also be considered to prevent undermining privacy and autonomy in order to implement these public health strategies consistent with legal and ethical considerations.

8.
J Public Health Manag Pract ; 26 Suppl 2, Advancing Legal Epidemiology: S1-S3, 2020.
Article in English | MEDLINE | ID: mdl-32004216
10.
J Law Med Ethics ; 47(2_suppl): 23-26, 2019 06.
Article in English | MEDLINE | ID: mdl-31298121

ABSTRACT

The Flint water crisis demonstrates the importance of adequate legal preparedness in dealing with complicated legal arrangements and multiple statutory responsibilities. It also demonstrates the need for alternative accountability measures when public officials fail to protect the public's health and explores mechanisms for restoring community trust in governmental public health.


Subject(s)
Public Health/legislation & jurisprudence , Social Responsibility , Water Pollution/legislation & jurisprudence , Water Supply/legislation & jurisprudence , Humans , Local Government , Michigan/epidemiology , Public Opinion , Social Justice , State Government , Trust
13.
Health Hum Rights ; 15(1): E20-31, 2013 Jun 14.
Article in English | MEDLINE | ID: mdl-25006087

ABSTRACT

The Framework Convention on Global Health (FCGH) represents an important idea for addressing the expanding array of governance challenges in global health. Proponents of the FCGH suggest that it could further the right to health through its incorporation of rights into national laws and policies, using litigation and community empowerment to advance rights claims and prominently establish the right to health as central to global health governance. Building on efforts to expand development and influence of the right to health through the implementation of the FCGH, in this article we find that human rights correspondingly holds promise in justifying the FCGH. By employing human rights as a means to develop and implement the FCGH, the existing and evolving frameworks of human rights can complement efforts to reform global health governance, with the FCGH and human rights serving as mutually reinforcing bases of norms and accountability in global health.


Subject(s)
Global Health , Health Policy , Human Rights , International Cooperation , Health Services Accessibility , Humans
14.
J Law Med Ethics ; 39(3): 340-54, 2011.
Article in English | MEDLINE | ID: mdl-21871032

ABSTRACT

The Patient Protection and Affordable Care Act (ACA) sets in motion a wide range of programs that substantially affected the health system in the United States and signify a moderate but important regulatory shift in the role of the federal government in public health. This article briefly addresses two interesting policy paradoxes about the ACA. First, while the legislation primarily addresses health care financing and insurance and establishes only a few initiatives directly targeting public health, the ACA nevertheless has the potential to produce extensive public health benefits across the United States population by improving access to health care and services and reducing cost. Essentially, the ACA does not take the explicit form of a public health law but instead strives to advance public health indirectly through its effects. Second, while the ACA does not establish a right to health - or even a right to health insurance - in the United States, it does set in motion a number of significant structural and normative changes to United States law that comport with the attainment of the right to health. Most significantly, key provisions of the bill are designed to improve availability, accessibility, acceptability, and quality of conditions necessary for health, and to prompt the government to respect, protect, and fulfill these conditions. These developments mean that, to a degree, the United States essentially has undertaken the same types of legal and policy steps that a country would be required to take to uphold the right to health without actually recognizing the right to health in any formal or legally binding way. Despite these dual paradoxes and the upside potential for public health improvements resulting from the ACA, the public health impact of the law remains uncertain and will be decided by numerous subsequent regulatory and implementation decisions. The ACA authorizes multiple federal agencies to engage in rulemaking, a process that will largely dictate the systemic and health impacts that will become its legacy. This reality opens up ample opportunity to bolster public health aspects and interpretations of the law, and to simultaneously augment the corresponding components of the right to health.


Subject(s)
Health Care Reform , Human Rights , Patient Protection and Affordable Care Act , Public Health , Health Services Accessibility , Humans , Insurance Coverage , Politics , Quality Improvement , United States
17.
Am J Public Health ; 98(10): 1779-86, 2008 Oct.
Article in English | MEDLINE | ID: mdl-18703431

ABSTRACT

The law is a frequently overlooked tool for addressing the complex practical and ethical issues that arise from the HIV/AIDS pandemic. The law intersects with reproductive and sexual health issues and HIV/AIDS in many ways. Well-written and rigorously applied laws could benefit persons living with (or at risk of contracting) HIV/AIDS, particularly concerning their reproductive and sexual health. Access to reproductive health services should be a legal right, and discrimination based on HIV status, which undermines access, should be prohibited. Laws against sexual violence and exploitation, which perpetuate the spread of HIV and its negative effects, should be enforced. Finally, a human rights framework should inform the drafting of laws to more effectively protect health.


Subject(s)
HIV Infections/prevention & control , Health Services Accessibility/legislation & jurisprudence , Patient Rights/legislation & jurisprudence , Pregnancy Complications, Infectious/prevention & control , Reproductive Health Services/legislation & jurisprudence , Reproductive Rights/legislation & jurisprudence , AIDS Serodiagnosis/legislation & jurisprudence , Female , Global Health , HIV Infections/transmission , Health Services Needs and Demand , Humans , Infectious Disease Transmission, Vertical/prevention & control , Mass Screening/organization & administration , Pregnancy , Prejudice , Rape/legislation & jurisprudence , Rape/prevention & control , Sex Work/legislation & jurisprudence , United States , Violence/legislation & jurisprudence , Violence/prevention & control
18.
J Law Med Ethics ; 35(4): 534-44, 511, 2007.
Article in English | MEDLINE | ID: mdl-18076506

ABSTRACT

Human rights play an integral role in the global governance of health. Recently, both structural and normative aspects of human rights have proliferated across multiple levels and within multiple contexts around the world. Human rights proliferation is likely to have a positive impact on the governance of health because it can expand the avenues through which a human rights framework or human rights norms may be used to address and improve health.


Subject(s)
Global Health , Human Rights , International Cooperation/legislation & jurisprudence , Humans
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