CENTER FOR HEALTH POLICY AND LAW - Northeastern University › law › pdfs › academics ›...
Transcript of CENTER FOR HEALTH POLICY AND LAW - Northeastern University › law › pdfs › academics ›...
NORTHEASTERN UNIVERSITY SCHOOL OF LAW
CENTER FOR HEALTH POLICY AND LAW
NORTHEASTERN UNIVERSITY SCHOOL OF LAW
U.S. News & World Report ranks Northeastern #14 for health care law.
AMONG OUR MANY ACTIVITIES:
We analyze law’s role in perpetuating and redressing health disparities among immigrants, minorities and other vulnerable populations.
We research the impact of law enforcement and legal policies on the opioid epidemic, and develop policy recommendations to stem abuse.
We explore the use of legal tools to reduce tobacco use and reverse the obesity epidemic.
We study the regulation of reproductive health, and look at how laws that are meant to help sex workers can have the opposite effect.
We analyze the role of intellectual property and trade laws on access to medicines.
We grapple with the complexities of health care quality reporting and the role of government in our private decisions around health.
We make a difference, in these areas and many others, by asking tough questions, producing high-quality, timely research and by offering solutions that have the power to improve health across the globe.
At Northeastern University School
of Law, our Center for Health Policy and Law brings together leading
scholars who produce pathbreaking
research with the power to create
practical change. We collaborate
across disciplines and continents,
applying our legal expertise to a
wide range of the most critical
health issues, from global health
disparities to health care financing
and public health crises.
NORTHEASTERN UNIVERSITY SCHOOL OF LAW
NORTHEASTERN UNIVERSITY SCHOOL OF LAW
Matthews Distinguished University Professor Wendy Parmet, an internationally recognized expert on health law, heads the School of Law’s Center for Health Policy and Law. In 2016, Professor Parmet received the Jay Healey Teaching Award from the American Society of Law, Medicine & Ethics at its annual conference. The eponymous award honors the memory of Jay Healey, a beloved teacher of health law at the University of Connecticut Schools of Law and Medicine and a leader among the nation’s health law teachers.
PA
GE
3
HEALTH LAW CONCENTRATIONS AND CERTIFICATE PROGRAMS
• JD with Concentration in Health Policy and Law
The JD with a concentration in health policy and law is designed for students who wish to practice in the fast-growing field of health law or enhance their knowledge of health policy. This in-depth program helps prepare lawyers who aim to work in health-related roles, some of which include working with health care providers and insurers, government regulatory agencies, firms handling pharmaceutical products liability and toxic tort cases, and NGOs and community-based organizations.
• LLM with Concentration in Health Policy and Law
For those particularly interested in health law, Northeastern offers a concentration in health policy and law, which is open to international students and US lawyers who wish to practice in the fast-growing field of health law or enhance their knowledge of health policy.
• GraduateCertificateinHealth Law
The Health Law Certificate is designed specifically to provide non-lawyer professionals with the skills necessary to understand, navigate and leverage the legal issues that arise within the health care field and to work effectively with counsel when a lawyer’s involvement is necessary. Students can apply their credits from this program to the Master of Legal Studies later on, if desired.
• MLS with Concentration in Health Law
For non-lawyer professionals who work regularly with lawyers and legal issues, the Master of Legal Studies with a concentration in health law provides the practical knowledge needed to more effectively address legal issues in health-related industries and organizations.
NORTHEASTERN UNIVERSITY SCHOOL OF LAW
• JD/MPH in Urban Health with Northeastern University Bouvé College of Health Sciences
This program recognizes the growing need for professionals trained to respond to unique public health challenges and opportunities facing urban populations. The JD/MPH program brings together interdisciplinary faculty — from the School of Law, D’Amore-McKim School of Business, College of Social Sciences and Humanities, College of Computer and Information Science and the Bouvé College of Health Sciences — with expertise in collaborating with diverse urban populations to provide students with the practice-based knowledge, skills and experience needed to address urban public health problems.
• JD/MPH in Public Health with Tufts University School of Medicine
In line with Northeastern University School of Law and Tufts University School of Medicine’s shared tradition of emphasizing the relationship between public policy and public health, this degree program allows students to choose from a wide array of courses at both institutions. The two schools’ common global perspective and commitment to active citizenship and interdisciplinary scholarship translate into a rich intellectual milieu in which to engage in critical thinking and focus on complex, population-based approaches to health. Students complete co-ops in legal and public health settings.
• JD/MA in Sustainable International Development with Brandeis University
The JD/MA in Sustainable International Development (SID) with Brandeis University’s Heller School for Social Policy and Management is a multidisciplinary program that prepares students to become development professionals meeting the needs of poor communities throughout the world. Students also acquire practical skills that will enable them to work directly with governments, nonprofits and other organizations to alleviate poverty; provide health, education and sanitation services; mitigate the effects of climate change; and create more effective paths toward sustainable development.
DUAL-DEGREE PROGRAMS
NORTHEASTERN UNIVERSITY SCHOOL OF LAW
PA
GE
4
• JD/MELP in Environmental Law with Vermont Law School
Combining Northeastern’s top ranking for practical training with Vermont Law School, home to the country’s premier environmental law program, this partnership is uniquely positioned to train problem solvers equipped not only for today’s challenges, but also tomorrow’s crises. This joint program offers students an array of environmental courses with a strong foundation in law, policy, science, economics and ethics. This multidisciplinary approach constructs the critical skill-sets that will be required for the next generation of environmental leaders.
• 3+3 BS in Health Science and JD
Northeastern University’s 3+3 Program is offered by invitation only to a select group of first-year, undergraduate students admitted into Northeastern University Bouvé College of Health Sciences. Students take advantage of an accelerated undergraduate program, earning a BS in three years, and then immediately enrolling in the School of Law’s three-year JD program. The program is designed to harness the outstanding academic performance and motivation within the students, connect them to distinguished faculty and an expansive network, and ultimately accelerate them into their careers in law.
• Advanced Legal and Interdisciplinary Research
• Assisted Reproductive Technology and the Law
• Bioethics and the Law
• Bioproperty
• Current Issues in Health Law and Policy
• Disability Law
• Drug Law and Policy
• Economic Perspectives on Health Policy
• Elder Law
• Environmental Law
• Global AIDS Policy Seminar
• Health Care Fraud and Abuse
• Health Law
• Human Rights in the Global Economy
• Intellectual Property
• International Health Law
• Patent Law
• Problems in Public Health Law
• Public Health Advocacy Clinic
• Reproductive Rights and the Law
• Health Care Compliance and Regulation (MLS)
• Patient Records, Privacy and Security (MLS)
SELECTED HEALTH LAW-RELATED COURSES
Public Health Law Watch
Public Health Law Watch is a collaborative initiative founded by the Center for Health Policy and Law and the George Consortium. It focuses on identifying proposed changes to statutes, regulation and policies at the federal, state and local level that may have a significant impact upon public and population health. It achieves its goal through:
• publishing white papers and regulatory comments
• participating in drafting and submission of amicus briefs
• organizing conference panels
Read the blog: publichealthlawwatch.org
@phlawwatch
• Public Health Advocacy Institute (PHAI)
• Domestic Violence Institute (DVI)
• Program on Human Rights and the Global Economy (PHRGE)
• Institute for Health Equity and Social Justice Research
• Center for Health Policy and Health Care Research
• Integrated Initiative for Global Health
COLLABORATORS
Health in Justice Action Lab
Health in Justice is an action laboratory guided by a vision of a healthier, more just society. Based on the belief that community well-being is best advanced through public health principles, it opposes criminalization of health and social problems. The lab’s project portfolio includes:
• drug-induced homicide
• prescription drug monitoring programs
• involuntary commitment for substance use
healthinjustice.org
@HiJAction
PA
GE
7
EXTERNAL PARTNERS ON-CAMPUS PARTNERS
“At the Center for Health Policy and Law, our focus is on harnessing legal tools to make individuals — and populations — more healthy. Whether it’s the opioid crisis or access to affordable health coverage, we engage many of today’s most pressing health policy challenges to generate real-world change.” — PROFESSOR LEO BELETSKY
• Domestic Violence Clinic
Students in the Domestic Violence Clinic assist in the representation of victims of domestic violence in restraining order cases (209A) as well as victims of sexual assault in Harassment Prevention Orders (258E). Restraining orders in Massachusetts include a broad range of relief (including no abuse, stay away conditions, no contact conditions, home surrenders, child custody and child support), designed to help stop the violence or threats of future violence in family or substantive dating relationships. The clinic — part of the law school’s Domestic Violence Institute — also assists community-based domestic violence organizations in longer-term projects related to policy, programming and outreach.
• Public Health Advocacy Clinic
Students in the Public Health Advocacy Clinic work with the law school’s Public Health Advocacy Institute and its Center for Public Health Litigation on legal approaches (including litigation) to improve public health as well as developing sound public health research methodology. Class time is devoted to gaining a basic understanding of the relevant legal foundations of public health advocacy; effectively communicating to a target audience; and discussing the balance between government intervention to set public health policy and individual responsibility in a variety of contexts, such as food, tobacco, alcohol policy and others.
CLINICAL OPPORTUNITIES
• Poverty Law and Practice Clinic
Since its founding in 1980, the Poverty Law and Practice Clinic has represented 8,000 welfare recipients and 4,800 unemployment claimants, and preserved an estimated $20 million in income for those clients and their families. In addition to representing individual clients with welfare, housing, health access and employment needs, the clinic also assists community-based organizations that give poor people a powerful voice for self-determination. The clinic’s case load has expanded to include cases involving immigrant access to public insurance as well as appeals for coverage denial. Students in this clinic appear before administrative, legislative and judicial decisionmakers, and assist with legal needs in the areas of employment, housing and welfare.
HEALTH LAW SCHOLARS
PA
GE
10
Eachincomingfirst-year class includes a cohort of Health Law Scholars — students selected to receive merit-basedtuitionawards because of demonstrated interest in health law and related fields.Inadditiontoproviding support on varioushealth-relatedresearch activities, Health Law Scholars serve as the center’s ambassadors at events throughout the year. Visit our website toseeprofilesofselected scholars.
“ At Northeastern, students interested in health law can develop essential legal skills and knowledge through tailored course offerings.Thesein-classskillsaretheneasilytranslatedintoco-opexperiences, where I’ve been able to build my legal toolkit, form professional relationships in the healthlawfieldandexplorepost-graduate options. Northeastern has taught me to be disciplined, flexible,resilient,creativeandmost importantly, kind, in the application and implementation of my of legal education.”
– PAIGE BAUM ’20
Honolulu
JuneauAnchorage
GEORGIACenters for Disease Control and Prevention (Atlanta)
CALIFORNIAAIDS Legal Referral Panel (San Francisco)
Drug Policy Alliance, Office of Legal Affairs (Oakland)
Mintz, Levin, Cohn, Ferris, Glovsky and Popeo (Los Angeles and San Diego)
National Health Law Program (Los Angeles)
Rady Children’s Hospital and Health Center (San Diego)
US Department of Health and Human Services, Region IX General Counsel (San Francisco)
Worksafe (Oakland)
Human Rights Law Network (India)
La Isla Foundation (Nicaragua)
Mintz, Levin, Cohn, Ferris, Glovsky and Popeo (United Kingdom)
Sergio Arouca National School of Public Health (Brazil)
UNAIDS (Switzerland)
SELECTED INTERNATIONAL CO-OPS
REPRESENTATIVE CO-OP EMPLOYERS IN HEALTH LAW FIELDS
Northeastern University School of Law’s signature Cooperative Legal Education Program guarantees all students almost a full year of work experience.
As the unparalleled leader in providing students with practical experience, Northeastern offers co-ops all over the world for JD and LLM students who are interested in pursuing health law-related careers. By integrating co-ops into the law school experience, Northeastern enables students to graduate with polished legal skills, valuable connections in the health field and the confidence and resumes of legal professionals.
Honolulu
JuneauAnchorage
NEW YORK, NEW YORKCenter for HIV Law and Policy
Center for Reproductive Rights, Domestic Legal Program
Community Service Society of New York, Health Initiatives Department
Mintz, Levin, Cohn, Ferris, Glovsky and Popeo
New York City Health and Hospitals Corporation
NYU Langone Medical Center (NYC)
WASHINGTON, DCMintz, Levin, Cohn, Ferris, Glovsky and Popeo
O’Donnell, Schwartz and Anderson
Planned Parenthood Federation of America, Department of Public Policy Litigation and Law
US Department of Health and Human Services, Office of Civil Rights
US Department of Health and Human Services, Office of Counsel to the Inspector General
VIRGINIAEnhesa (Arlington)
Strategic Management Services (Alexandria)
Alnylam Pharmaceuticals (Cambridge)
Cambridge and Somerville Legal Services, Elder Law and Mental Health Rights (Cambridge)
Children’s Hospital Corporation, Office of General Counsel (Boston)
Choate Hall & Stewart (Boston)
Community Catalyst (Boston)
Dana-Farber Cancer Institute (Boston)
Francois-Xavier Bagnoud Center for Health and Human Rights (Boston)
Fresenius Medical Care North America, General Counsel (Waltham)
Harvard Pilgrim Health Care (Quincy)
Health Law Advocates (Boston)
Massachusetts Attorney General’s Office, Health Care Division (Boston)
Massachusetts Department of Public Health (Boston)
Massachusetts Executive Office of Health and Human Services (Boston)
Mintz, Levin, Cohn, Ferris, Glovsky and Popeo (Boston)
Navigant Consulting (Boston)
NaviNet, Inc. (Boston)
Partners HealthCare, Office of General Counsel (Boston)
Radius Health (Waltham)
UMass Memorial Health Care (Worcester)
Vericel Corporation (Cambridge)
Wellframe (Boston)
REPRESENTATIVE CO-OP EMPLOYERS IN HEALTH LAW FIELDS
RHODE ISLANDCVS Health (Providence)
MASSACHUSETTS
RANKED #1 FOR PRACTICAL TRAINING BY THE NATIONAL JURIST
PA
GE
13
The Center for Health Policy and Law is guided by internationally recognized faculty and staff with diverse areas of expertise. Their research interests and participation in practical-oriented applications include:
• ACCESS TO MEDICINES
• BIOETHICS
• DRUG LAW AND POLICY
• GENDER AND SEXUALITY
• GLOBAL HEALTH
• HEALTH AND HUMAN RIGHTS
• HEALTH CARE
• HEALTH GOVERNANCE
• IMMIGRANT HEALTH
• INTELLECTUAL PROPERTY
• PUBLIC HEALTH LAW
• REPRODUCTIVE HEALTH
CORE FACULTY AND RESEARCHERS
Faculty Director
Wendy E. ParmetMatthews Distinguished University Professor of Law
Professor of Public Policy and Urban Affairs, School of Public Policy and Urban Affairs
Managing Director
Jennifer Lea HuerLecturer, Bouvé College of Health Sciences
LEADERSHIP
Margo Lindauer Associate Teaching Professor; Director, Domestic Violence Institute
Kristin MadisonProfessor of Law and Health Sciences
Aziza AhmedProfessor of Law
NORTHEASTERN UNIVERSITY SCHOOL OF LAW
PA
GE
14
Shan MohammedAssociate Clinical Professor, Bouvé College of Health Sciences
Jason PotterAssociate Teaching Professor
David RochefortArts and Sciences Distinguished Professor of Political Science
Emily SpielerHadley Professor of Law
Kara SwansonProfessor of Law
Richard WamaiAssociate Professor of Cultures, Societies and Global Studies;Director, African American Studies Program
CORE FACULTY AND RESEARCHERS
Brook BakerProfessor of Law
Leo BeletskyAssociate Professor of Law and Health Sciences
Richard DaynardUniversity Distinguished Professor of Law; President, Public Health Advocacy Institute
Claudia HauptAssociate Professor of Law and Political Science
Patricia IllingworthProfessor of Philosophy and Business; Lecturer, Law and Public Policy
Stephen IntilleAssociate Professor, College of Computer and Information Science and Department of Health Sciences, Bouvé College of Health Sciences
SELECTED FACULTY PUBLICATIONS
PROFESSOR AZIZA AHMED• “Risk, Feminism and HIV,” in Governance
Feminism: A Handbook, eds. J. Halley et al. (University of Minnesota Press, forthcoming)
• “Theories of State and Family,” in Routledge Handbook of International Family Law, eds. B. Stark and J. Heaton (Routledge, forthcoming)
• “Race and Assisted Reproduction: Making Families After Loving v. Virginia,” 86 Fordham Law Review 2801 (2018)
• “Addressing HIV/AIDS at the Intersection of Anti-Trafficking and Health Law and Policy,” in Revisiting the Law and Governance of Trafficking, Forced Labor and Modern Slavery, ed. P. Kotiswaran (Cambridge University Press, 2017)
• “Abortion in a Post-Truth Moment: A Response to Erwin Chemerinsky and Michele Goodwin,” 95 Texas Law Review See Also 198 (2017)
• “Women’s Rights Post-Bandung” in Bandung, Global History and International Law: Critical Pasts and Pending Futures, eds. V. Nessiah, L. Eslava and M. Fakhri (Cambridge University Press, 2017)
• “Adjudicating Risk: AIDS, Crime and Culpability,” 3 Wisconsin Law Review 627 (2016)
PROFESSOR BROOK BAKER• “A Sliver of Hope: Analyzing Voluntary Licenses
to Accelerate Affordable Access to Medicines” 10 Northeastern University Law Review 226 (2018)
• “Data Exclusivity Exceptions and Compulsory Licensing to Promote Generic Medicines in the European Union: A Proposal for Greater Coherence in European Pharmaceutical Legislation,” 10 Journal of Pharmaceutical Policy and Practice 19 (2017) (co-author)
• “The Incredible Shrinking Victory: Eli Lilly v. Canada, Success, Judicial Reversal and Continuing Threats from Pharmaceutical ISDS,” 49 Loyola Chicago Law Journal 479 (2017) (co-author)
• “Trans-Pacific Partnership Provisions in Intellectual Property, Transparency and Investment Chapters Threaten Access to Medicines in the US and Elsewhere,” PLoS Medicine (March 2016)
• “International Collaboration on IP/Access to Medicines: Birth of South Africa’s Fix the Patent Laws Campaign,” 60 New York Law School Law Review 297 (2015-2016)
PROFESSOR LEO BELETSKY• “21st Century Cures for the Overdose Crisis,”
44 American Journal of Law & Medicine 359 (2018)
• “The Global Health and Equity Imperative for Safe Consumption Facilities,” 392 The Lancet 553 (2018)
• “Increased Non-Fatal Overdose Risk Associated with Involuntary Drug Treatment in a Longitudinal Study with People Who Inject Drugs,” 113 Addiction 1056 (2018) (co-author)
• “Deploying Prescription Drug Monitoring to Address the Overdose Crisis: Ideology Meets Reality,” 15 Indiana Health Law Review 139 (2018)
• “Opioid Crisis: No Easy Fix to Its Social and Economic Determinants,” 108 American Journal of Public Health 182 (2018) (co-author)
• “Action, Not Rhetoric, Needed to Reverse the Opioid Overdose Epidemic,” 45 The Journal of Law, Medicine & Ethics 20 (2017)
• “Prison Health in the Age of the Opioid Crisis: It’s Time to Repeal the Inmate Exception,” 107 American Journal of Public Health 384 (2017) (co-author)
NORTHEASTERN UNIVERSITY SCHOOL OF LAW
PA
GE
16
PROFESSOR RICHARD DAYNARD• Book Review: “Public Health Consequences of
E-Cigarettes: A Consensus Study Report of the National Academies of Sciences, Engineering and Medicine,” 39 Journal of Public Health Policy 379 (2018)
• “Commentary: Enough is Enough,” 36 Journal of Public Health Policy 150 (2015)
• “Tobacco Industry Use of Personal Responsibility Rhetoric in Public Relations and Litigation: Disguising Freedom to Blame as Freedom of Choice,” 105 American Journal of Public Health 250 (2015) (co-author)
PROFESSOR CLAUDIA HAUPT• “The Limits of Professional Speech,” 128
The Yale Law Journal Forum (forthcoming 2018)
• “The Role of Civil Commitment in the Opioid Crisis,” 46 The Journal of Law, Medicine & Ethics 343 (2018) (co-author)
• “Physician Autonomy and the Opioid Crisis,” 46 The Journal of Law, Medicine & Ethics 203 (2018) (co-author)
• “Unprofessional Advice,” 19 University of Pennsylvania Journal of Constitutional Law 671 (2017)
• “Professional Ethics, Personal Conscience and Public Expectations,” 27 Journal of Clinical Ethics 233 (2016)
• “Professional Speech,” 125 The Yale Law Journal 1238 (2016)
PROFESSOR MARGO LINDAUER• “‘Please Stop Telling Her to Leave.’ Where is the
Money: Reclaiming Economic Power to Address Domestic Violence,” 39 Seattle University Law Review 1263 (2016)
PROFESSOR KRISTIN MADISON• “Health Policy and Regulation,” in Shortell and
Kaluzny’s Health Care Management: Organization Design and Behavior, eds. L.R. Burns et al. (Cengage, seventh edition, forthcoming) (co-author)
• “State-Level Community Benefit Regulation and Nonprofit Hospitals’ Provision of Community Benefits,” 43 Journal of Health Politics, Policy and Law 229 (2018) (co-author)
• “Health Care Quality Reporting: A Failed Form of Mandated Disclosure?” 13 Indiana Health Law Review 310 (2016)
• “The Risks of Using Workplace Wellness Programs to Foster a Culture of Health,” 35 Health Affairs 2068 (2016)
• “Using Reporting Requirements to Improve Employer Wellness Incentives and Their Regulation,” 39 Journal of Health Politics, Policy and Law 1013 (2014) (co-author)
• “Building a Better Laboratory: The Federal Role in Promoting Health System Experimentation,” 41 Pepperdine Law Review 765 (2014)
PROFESSOR WENDY PARMET• The Health of Newcomers: Immigration, Health
Policy and the Case for Global Solidarity (NYU Press, 2017) (co-author)
• “The Supreme Court’s Crisis Pregnancy Center Case — Implications for Health Law,” The New England Journal of Medicine (August 29, 2018) (co-author)
• “New Dangers for Immigrants and the Health Care System,” Health Affairs Blog (April 20, 2018) (co-author)
• “Free Speech and Public Health: Unraveling the Commercial-Professional Speech Paradox,” 78 Ohio State Law Journal 887 (2017)
• “Paternalism, Self-Governance and Public Health: The Case of E-Cigarettes,” 70 University of Miami Law Review 879 (2016)
• “Wollschlaeger v. Governor of Florida — The First Amendment, Physician Speech and Firearm Safety,” 374 The New England Journal of Medicine 2304 (June 16, 2016) (co-author)
• “A Panic Foretold: Ebola in the United States,” Critical Public Health (March 17, 2016) (co-author)
PROFESSOR JASON POTTER• “Services and Resources for People Living with
HIV/AIDS in the Southcoast of Massachusetts: ‘Can’t Get There from Here!’,” 2 Journal of Nursing and Healthcare 2 (2017)
PA
GE
17
PA
GE
12
“The law plays a key role in distributing resources that contribute to the health and well-being of all. The Center for Health Policy and Law brings together faculty, students and practitioners who are passionate about the pressing issue of how to alter the legal landscape to improve the health of Americans and people around the world.” — PROFESSOR AZIZA AHMED
• HIV/AIDS
• Reproductive health
• Health system reform and trends
• Human rights
• Global health (Africa, Europe)
• Pharmaceuticals, drug law, medication as treatment
• Public health (gun violence, obesity, tanning, domestic violence)
• Population health and social determinants of health
In addition to offering a broad curriculum in health and public health law, the Center for Health Policy and Law sponsors conferences, lectures, colloquia, a health law moot court team, the Health Law Society and workshops that introduce students to career opportunities in the growing field of health law and policy.
Student Activities
The Health Law Society is a student group committed to raising the visibility of health law at Northeastern and our broader community, with a particular emphasis on traditional public health concerns. We invite practitioners and academics to present on current health topics; build relationships between health care students and law students; provide resources to law students interested in learning more about health law topics; support law students enrolled or interested in the JD/MPH programs; sponsor student participation in health law moot court competitions; and attend health-related conferences.
Recurring Events:
• Health Law Conference (April)
• Health Law Lecture (fall)
• Roundtables (monthly)
• Community Forums/Current Events
• Health Law Networking Event with Health Law Society
ACTIVITIES AND EVENTS
Activities and initiatives cover a range of issues, including:
Joshua Abrams ’97Senior Legal Counsel, Office of the General CounselPartners HealthCare System
Amy Hudspeth Cabell ’91Research Integrity and Compliance Officer, Health Care AttorneyHarvard Pilgrim Health Care Institute
John Chesley ’84PartnerRopes & Gray
Lois Dehls Cornell ’86Executive Vice PresidentMassachusetts Medical Society
Leslie Joseph ’93General CounselMount Auburn Hospital
Donna Levin ’78National DirectorThe Network for Public Health Law
Golda Philip ’09Deputy Director, Office of Civil Rights, Diversity and InclusionUS Department of Health and Human Services
Stephen RosenfeldHealth Care Attorney and AdvocateHealth Law Advocates and Rosenfeld & Rafik
Lawrence Vernaglia PartnerFoley & Lardner
Joseph Vittiglio ’96Senior Vice President, General Counsel and Secretary AMAG Pharmaceuticals
ADVISORY BOARD MEMBERSThe center’s advisory board, a mix of graduates and practitioners from across multiple practices of health policy and law, serves as a guiding force to help the center shape and achieve its vision, short- and long-term goals, create new connections and offer valuable insights into the current practice of health policy and law across the nation.
Annual health law conference, April 2018.
northeastern.edu/law/health [email protected] @NUSLHealth
NORTHEASTERN UNIVERSITY SCHOOL OF LAW
CENTERS OF EXCELLENCE
CENTER FOR HEALTH POLICY AND LAW
CENTER FOR LAW, INNOVATION AND CREATIVITY (CLIC)
CENTER FOR PUBLIC INTEREST ADVOCACY AND COLLABORATION (CPIAC)