journal
https://read.qxmd.com/read/38332596/interdisciplinary-collaboration-in-the-mental-health-sector-legislating-the-victorian-collaborative-centre-for-mental-health-and-wellbeing
#21
JOURNAL ARTICLE
Bernadette McSherry
This column explores how the law might support interdisciplinary collaboration in research and practice in the mental health sector. It provides an overview of the Victorian Collaborative Centre for Mental Health and Wellbeing which was established by statute to support collaboration across multiple disciplines and services for the benefit of mental health consumers. It suggests that interdisciplinary collaboration, which has the lived experience and knowledge of mental health consumers at its heart, has the potential for transformative and beneficial systemic change...
December 2023: Journal of Law and Medicine
https://read.qxmd.com/read/38332595/gain-of-function-and-loss-of-control-genetic-modification-of-microbial-agents-viruses-on-steroids
#22
JOURNAL ARTICLE
Mike O'Connor
Gain of Function refers to genetic modification to enhance certain properties of a biological agent. "Dual use research" refers to experiments which have a primary goal of benefitting humanity, but which could produce harm if misapplied. So, for example, a virus which was being genetically modified (GM) for altruistic reasons might become more transmissible or resistant to vaccines or antimicrobial medications. Such a GM virus has bioterrorism potential. The UN Biological Weapons Convention has not been universally approved and 10 States are not signatories to the Convention...
December 2023: Journal of Law and Medicine
https://read.qxmd.com/read/38332594/is-intellectual-property-the-covid-19-bad-guy-lessons-we-could-learn-from-the-pandemic
#23
JOURNAL ARTICLE
Charles Lawson
At the time the COVID-19 pandemic was declared there was no vaccine and other medical products were insufficient to meet demands. At the time intellectual property was considered a limitation to an effective pandemic response and the World Trade Organization considered a waiver of intellectual property addressed by the Agreement on Trade-Related Aspects of Intellectual Property Rights (TRIPS). The lesson from the COVID-19 pandemic and TRIPS waiver is that given enough time sufficient medical products will be delivered, albeit there remain some complicated delivery challenges and vaccine hesitancy issues...
December 2023: Journal of Law and Medicine
https://read.qxmd.com/read/38332593/lessons-from-re-teo-unconventional-practice-and-the-national-law
#24
JOURNAL ARTICLE
Cameron Stewart, Ian Freckelton
This section explores the decision of the New South Wales Professional Standards Committee, in Re Teo [2023] NSWMPSC 2. The case provides insights into how the Health Practitioner Regulation National Law Act 2009 (Qld) regulates practitioners who practise outside of conventional practice. The section compares the decision to similar cases and then concludes with a proposal that an express policy on unconventional practice is needed in Australia.
December 2023: Journal of Law and Medicine
https://read.qxmd.com/read/38332592/spit-hoods-reforms-to-law-and-practice
#25
JOURNAL ARTICLE
Ian Freckelton
Spit hoods have been used for decades to reduce the ability of people to spit and bite police officers, corrective services officers, paramedics, doctors and nurses. However, historically and in public consciousness they have sinister resonances and often induce fear, panic and distress in persons to whom they are applied or in whose presence they are worn. Problematically frequently spit hoods have been used on detainees from ethnic minorities, including in Australia, on Indigenous persons, individuals with mental illnesses and children taken into custody...
December 2023: Journal of Law and Medicine
https://read.qxmd.com/read/38303626/an-australian-sugary-sweetened-beverage-levy-why-what-and-how
#26
JOURNAL ARTICLE
Meredith Blake, Marilyn Bromberg, Stephanie Milan
Sugar-sweetened beverages (SSBs) are associated with overweight/obesity and linked to chronic diseases. A levy or tax on SSBs has been introduced in many jurisdictions globally as a way to lower sugar consumption and/or reformulate lower sugar levels in order to address increasing rates of overweight and obesity. In this article we describe the various approaches to SSB taxation in these jurisdictions. We then explore the legal and policy landscape relevant to the introduction of an SSB levy in Australia. We argue that there is a mandate for the Australian government to introduce such a tax given the clear evidence that consumption, and therefore the adverse associated health outcomes, have a disproportionate impact upon those from lower socio-economic communities...
July 2023: Journal of Law and Medicine
https://read.qxmd.com/read/38303625/the-continuing-problem-of-expert-evidence-in-medical-litigation-a-surgical-perspective-with-reference-to-daubert
#27
JOURNAL ARTICLE
Arthur Richardson, Helen Pham, Michael Hollands
The tension that exists between the medical and legal professions regarding expert evidence is longstanding. In this article, we will examine some of the issues regarding expert evidence particularly as it relates to matters involving surgeons. Many of the current aspects of the Australian uniform evidence law in relation to expert testimony were based on the Federal Rules of Evidence promulgated in the United States in 1975. We will discuss some of the problems of expert evidence in surgical matters, particularly in New South Wales, and offer some thoughts on how the so-called Daubert trilogy could form a basis on which to re-examine the concept of an "expert"...
July 2023: Journal of Law and Medicine
https://read.qxmd.com/read/38303624/supporting-the-involvement-of-adults-with-cognitive-disabilities-in-research-the-need-for-reform
#28
JOURNAL ARTICLE
Shih-Ning Then, John Chesterman, Yuu Matsuyama
This article examines current legal and ethical requirements concerning research about adults with cognitive disabilities. These requirements, the article argues, are complex, difficult to navigate, and inevitably act as a disincentive for research to be conducted. These requirements also do little to encourage active involvement by adults with cognitive disabilities in deciding whether to participate in research. The article argues that reforms are needed for State and Territory laws to require, wherever possible, adults to be supported to make their own decisions about research participation...
July 2023: Journal of Law and Medicine
https://read.qxmd.com/read/38303623/the-treatment-of-young-transgender-people-and-the-law
#29
JOURNAL ARTICLE
Anthony Gray
The law has slowly recognised the concept of a transgender person. After initially fixating on someone's physical birth gender, it has now accepted the concept of gender identity. It has been challenged by young people experiencing gender dysphoria seeking medical treatment. Though in recent years it has increasingly accepted the right of such a person to access appropriate treatment, this article suggests further improvements in this area of the law are desirable, including no longer making the distinction between therapeutic and non-therapeutic treatment, reforming the extent of judicial power in this context, and according greater autonomy to mature young people...
July 2023: Journal of Law and Medicine
https://read.qxmd.com/read/38303622/relatives-right-to-know-genetic-information-in-aotearoa-new-zealand
#30
JOURNAL ARTICLE
Christian Poland
Once someone is diagnosed with a genetic abnormality or disorder, that information can be extremely valuable to their biological relatives. It may allow them to access preventive treatment or make informed decisions, such as whether to have a biological child or not. However, when the original family member refuses to disclose that information to at-risk relatives, a conflict arises between their right to patient confidentiality and their relatives' right to know. Aotearoa New Zealand lacks a specific, workable mechanism for disclosing genetic information to at-risk relatives...
July 2023: Journal of Law and Medicine
https://read.qxmd.com/read/38303621/the-statutory-standard-of-care-in-australia-and-its-application-to-experimental-medical-practice
#31
JOURNAL ARTICLE
Perry Peralta
Clinical innovation is essential in the development and improvement of interventions used to treat medical conditions. In Australia, the States and Territories have statutorily reintroduced the Bolam principle in a modified form which provides a defence for medical practitioners who have practised in a manner that, at the time, was widely accepted in Australia by peer professional opinion as competent professional practice. This article explores whether the standard could be successfully pleaded as a defence by experimental practitioners...
July 2023: Journal of Law and Medicine
https://read.qxmd.com/read/38303620/the-duty-of-care-to-protect-employees-against-the-risk-of-psychiatric-harm-from-vicarious-trauma-kozarov-v-victoria
#32
JOURNAL ARTICLE
Russ Scott, Ian Freckelton
An employer owes every employee a duty to take all reasonable steps to provide a safe place and system of work. Whether an employer will be liable for psychological harm suffered by an employee will depend on the particular circumstances of the case. In Kozarov v Victoria (2022) 273 CLR 115; [2022] HCA 12 (Kozarov), the High Court considered whether the Victorian Office of Public Prosecutions had been placed on notice of a risk of "vicarious trauma" to a solicitor employed in the Special Sexual Offenders Unit and whether it was required to make a response by taking active steps including offering a rotation to another section where the solicitor did not to have to manage cases of child rape and other sexual offences of gross depravity...
July 2023: Journal of Law and Medicine
https://read.qxmd.com/read/38303619/legal-liability-of-clinical-ethics-services-in-australia-should-i-be-more-worried-than-i-am
#33
JOURNAL ARTICLE
Sharon L Feldman, Carolyn Johnston
A key function of clinical ethics services (CESs) is to provide decision-making support to health care providers in ethically challenging cases. Cases referred for ethics consultation are likely to involve diverging views or conflict, or to confront the boundaries of appropriate medical practice. Such cases might also attract legal action due to their contentious nature. As CESs become more prevalent in Australia, this article considers the potential legal liability of a CES and its members. With no reported litigation against a CES in Australia, we look to international experience and first principles...
July 2023: Journal of Law and Medicine
https://read.qxmd.com/read/38303618/sharing-of-genomic-data-exploring-the-privacy-implications-of-the-changing-status-of-genomic-data
#34
JOURNAL ARTICLE
Margaret Otlowski, Lisa Eckstein
This article explores the privacy implications of the changing status of genomic data and the consequences for genomic data-sharing. It sets out the theoretical framework for privacy protection in Australia and the centrality of the concept of "personal information" - information from which an individual is "reasonably identifiable". It examines the applicability of this legal framework to genomic data and the challenge from the ever-growing risk of identifiability of such data and implications for research participation and researchers' willingness to share genomic data...
July 2023: Journal of Law and Medicine
https://read.qxmd.com/read/38303617/welcome-to-television-regulating-alcohol-marketing-on-television-in-australia-to-protect-the-health-of-young-people
#35
JOURNAL ARTICLE
Paula O'Brien
Television content is now available whenever and wherever viewers want it through free-to-air commercial television, catch-up television, video-on-demand services whether subscription or free, and social media platforms such as Facebook and TikTok. Alcohol marketing is pervasive in television, with young people's exposure to such marketing being causally connected to harms such as early initiation to drinking and heavy drinking practices. The World Health Organization recommends that countries ban or place comprehensive restrictions on alcohol marketing...
July 2023: Journal of Law and Medicine
https://read.qxmd.com/read/38303616/the-patent-landscape-for-crispr-genome-editing-in-australia
#36
JOURNAL ARTICLE
Naomi Foo, Olumayowa Adesanya, Jane Nielsen, Dianne Nicol
Although Australia has a proud record of health and medical research, it finds less traction when it comes to innovative product development. Patent filings are recognised as one of the measures of national innovation, and this is one measure where Australian innovators are falling short. We examined whether there may be discrete pockets of innovation in particular areas of technology where Australian researchers are making significant contributions. This study used patent filings as a measure of innovation and used clustered regularly interspaced short palindromic repeat (CRISPR) genome editing as a case study...
July 2023: Journal of Law and Medicine
https://read.qxmd.com/read/38303615/the-standard-of-care-test-revisited-competing-approaches-to-defining-competent-profession-practice-in-australia
#37
JOURNAL ARTICLE
Cameron Stewart, Peter Kim
This section examines the recent decision of the New South Wales Court of Appeal in Dean v Pope [2022] NSWCA 260. The decision settles a long-running dispute in New South Wales about the test for the standard of care under s 5O of the Civil Liability Act 2002 (NSW). That provision was introduced following the medical indemnity crisis of the early 2000s and provided for a modified Bolam test to protect professionals from claims in negligence when they had acted in accordance with a standard of "competent professional practice"...
July 2023: Journal of Law and Medicine
https://read.qxmd.com/read/38303614/coroners-inquests-and-criminal-and-disciplinary-law
#38
JOURNAL ARTICLE
Ian Freckelton
Coroners' inquests in Australia and New Zealand are no longer formally part of the criminal justice process. However, they can take place after the resolution of criminal charges and, although coroners' findings cannot be expressed in terms of persons' criminality, inquests can also result in referrals to prosecuting authorities. In addition, referrals to professionals' disciplinary regulators can be made by coroners. The potential for such adverse outcomes for the individuals affected makes it essential for those representing parties or witnesses at coronial hearings to consider carefully the forensic strategies that they deploy and, in particular, the advice that they provide, including in relation to claims to the privilege against self-incrimination...
July 2023: Journal of Law and Medicine
https://read.qxmd.com/read/37271962/advancing-the-rights-of-patients-in-nigeria-analysing-the-patients-bill-of-rights
#39
JOURNAL ARTICLE
Olaitan O Olusegun, Babafemi Odunsi
The rights of persons who seek medical attention have been enshrined in national and international legal instruments, notwithstanding their health status. However, these rights are not fully secured in Nigeria due to some factors affecting the health care system. Using the doctrinal method of study, this article examines the concept of the rights of patients in Nigeria. It discusses the nature of the health system in Nigeria and highlights the rights stated in the Patients' Bill of Rights 2018 (Ng) (PBoR) as well as the corresponding duties of health care practitioners...
May 2023: Journal of Law and Medicine
https://read.qxmd.com/read/37271961/-serious-disability-a-medical-diagnosis-or-an-arbitrary-restriction-of-reproductive-liberties
#40
JOURNAL ARTICLE
Chantel Leadbeater
In Queensland, use of preimplantation genetic diagnosis (PGD) and prenatal diagnostic testing (PND) is limited to the detection of and abstention from embryos or foetuses afflicted with "serious" disabilities. In the absence of a legislative definition or widespread consensus among physicians regarding those disablements which are sufficiently "serious", it begs the question: is Queensland's current regulation of PND and PGD inconsistent with the rule of law because it lacks clarity, stability, and certainty and thus arbitrarily restricts reproductive liberties? This article will demonstrate that the detection of genetic abnormalities via PGD and PND will lead to differing clinical outcomes pre- and post-implantation...
May 2023: Journal of Law and Medicine
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