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Introduction to Public Health Law
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Part I History of Medical and Public Health Science
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Paracelsus Philippus Aureolus Theophrastus Bombastus Von Hohenheim Early 16th Century Transition From Alchemy Experiments And Systematic Observations Antimony
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Anatomy And Function Andreas Vesalius Mid 16th Century Accurate Anatomy William Harvey Early 17th Century Flow Of The Blood And Operation Of The Heart
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Edward Jenner Smallpox Major Killer Wiped Out The Indigenous Peoples 1798 – Published His Book On Cowpox
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John Snow Cholera In London Broad Street Pump Proved Cholera Is Waterborne 1854
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Ignaz Philipp Semmelweis Childbed Fever Fellow Medical Student Died Controlled Studies 1849
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Louis Pasteur Scientific Method Germ Theory Vaccination For Rabies Pasteurization 1860s-1880s
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Foundation of Modern Surgery William Morton Anesthesia 1846 Joseph Lister Antisepsis 1867-1880s Surgery Became Big Business Drove Development of Hospitals
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Infectious Diseases Koch’s Postulates - 1880s Agent Must Be Present In Every Case; Agent Must Be Isolated From The Host And Grown In Vitro [In A Lab Dish]; Agent Must Cause Disease When Inoculated Into A Healthy Susceptible Host; And Agent Must Be Recovered Again From The Experimentally Infected Host. Limitations
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Tuberculosis Control - 1900 The Major Killer Koch And Pasteur Sanatoria Pasteurization Of Milk Disease Control Of Dairy Herds
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Drug Chemistry – 1880s German/Swiss Dye Industry Bayer Hoffman La Roche Ciba
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Antibiotics Sulfa Drugs In The 1930s Penicillin Alexander Flemming – 1928 Purified By Chain And Florey In 1939 World War II - Coconut Grove Fire (1942) Streptomycin – 1944 First Antituberculosis Drug Selman Abraham Waksman – 1944 (Coined The Term Antibiotic
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Post World War II Conquering Microbial Diseases Vaccines Antibiotics Chronic Diseases Better Drugs Better Studies Leukemia
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Part II Public Health Law and Practice
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Public Health in the Colonies Most of the population lived in poorly drained coastal areas Cholera Yellow Fever Urban Diseases Smallpox Tuberculosis Average Life Expectancy in cities was 25 years
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Public Health Law Actions in Colonial America Quarantines, areas of non-intercourse Inspection of ships and sailors Nuisance abatement Colonial governments had and used Draconian powers The Police Powers
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Police Power Police departments came later Power to protect the public health and safety Communicable disease control Sanitation Nuisance Drinking water
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Articles of Confederation In effect between independence and the ratification of the Constitution in 1789 Left all powers to the states The states provided what support they wanted to the federal effort Did not work during the War Remember the stories about Washington's troops not having shoes?
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Public Health in the Constitution Federal Powers Interstate commerce International trade and travel War powers State Powers Powers not given to the federal government Police Powers
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Actions in the 1798 Yellow Fever Epidemic For ten years prior, the yellow fever had raged almost annually in the city, and annual laws were passed to resist it. The wit of man was exhausted, but in vain. Never did the pestilence rage more violently than in the summer of 1798. The State was in despair. The rising hopes of the metropolis began to fade. The opinion was gaining ground, that the cause of this annual disease was indigenous, and that all precautions against its importation were useless. But the leading spirits of that day were unwilling to give up the city without a final desperate effort. The havoc in the summer of 1798 is represented as terrific. The whole country was roused. A cordon sanitaire was thrown around the city. Governor Mifflin of Pennsylvania proclaimed a non- intercourse between New York and Philadelphia. (Argument of counsel in Smith v. Turner, 48 U.S. (7 How.) 283, 340-41 (1849))
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Is there a Federal Police Power? Constitutional Debate US Supreme Court says no, but... Can the Feds do local disease control? CDC only comes in at the state's invitation Public Health is state and local Can the Feds require smallpox vaccinations? Invasion Clause?
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Limits of the Police Power Very broad Protect public health and safety Must be prospective Public health regulations are about preventing future harm Must be civil, not criminal The reason for the action, and not the results, determine whether it is criminal Confinement in jail Megan's laws and confinement of sexual predators
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Public Health as the First Administrative Law Among the first acts of Congress Public health service hospitals and quarantine stations State and Local Government Boards of Health - Paul Revere sat on the Boston Board of Health
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Part III Core Public Health Functions
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Disease reporting No right of privacy No right to refuse reporting Can inspect medical records Child abuse and violent injury reporting Also extended to medical procedures, occupational illnesses, use of scheduled drugs, and other areas of public health concern
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Disease Investigation Contract Tracing Partner Notification Investigations of business and food establishments Public health data can be reported to the police, but it cannot be the basis of prosecution
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Mandatory treatment and restrictions Vaccination law Jacobson - no free riders No requirement for religious exception VD/STI/TB, others Can require testing or treatment Can hold in jail if you refuse Habeas Corpus is the remedy Many states have weakened these laws due to political pressure over AIDS
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Environmental Health Food sanitation, drinking-water treatment, and wastewater disposal Most public health orders are directed at environmental health problems. Two central legal questions: When does the government owe compensation to the owners of regulated property? When can inspectors enter private premises to look for public health law violations?
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Vital Statistics Birth and death records Disease registries
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Part IV What are the legal tools to carry out these functions?
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Rulemaking - Public Health Regulations Legislature must delegate its power Why promulgate regulations? Gives direction to regulated parties Allow public participation Harmonize practices between jurisdictions Limits the issues if there is Judicial Review Can be overruled by the legislature
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When Agencies Make Decisions – Adjudications How is an adjudication different from a rule? Specific facts and specific parties How is an adjudication different from a trial? Expert decisionmakers Agency makes the final decision so decisions are uniform (Current controversy in LA) Conflict of interests can be a problem
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Permits and Licenses Permits Licenses Rights for duties Issued on Set Criteria Conditioned on accepting regulatory standards Warrantless inspections
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Inspections Legally classified as an adjudication License and permit holders No warrant Administrative warrants No probable cause Area warrants Limits to administrative warrants Cannot be used to undermine criminal due process
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Enforcement Actions Civil fines Injunctions to stop dangerous activities Court orders to force compliance with public health regulations Criminal prosecution for disobeying a court orders
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The Advisory and Consultative Role Public health is about prevention as well as enforcement Opening a new restaurant Designing food handling area Training kitchen personnel Managing day to day problems The major role of the CDC
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Acting in an Emergency Power expands with necessity Courts do not block emergency actions Knowing what to do is what matters Emergency powers laws are easy to pass, but do not solve resource and expertise problems Law matters a month after The more laws you pass, the more loopholes you can create
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Part V The Politics of Public Health
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Political Control of Agencies Agency heads are political appointees Federal independent agencies are different Some states have boards of health, but not much improvement Agency goals are subservient to other political agendas Salary is also a political control
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Impact of Political Control Feds Conformation battles at the federal level Can still get talented people at the top More problems at midlevel, esp. for experts States Salaries limit expertise in many positions Very difficult to get real experts at the top because of improper political pressures
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Impact on Public Health Future of Public Health IOM 1988 No career track for high level public health professionals Fired for political disputes No pension rights, no severance, not contracts You cannot stay in public health if you protect the public health Do agencies have expertise any more?
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