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Alternative, Complementary, and Integrative Medicine, The Legal Issues
Professors
James Bulen,
Sherman Cohn, and
Gregory Fortsch
J.D. Seminar 065 (cross-listed)
| 3 credit hours
Alternative, Complementary, and Integrative Medicine ("non-traditional medicine") ("CAM") is the fastest-growing sector of American Health Care and is one of the fastest growing fields in the United States. Presently, at least 50 percent of Americans are using some form of alternative and complementary therapy such as acupuncture, nutritional supplementation, herbs, massage, yoga, chiropractic and homeopathy. According to the Journal of the American Medical Association in 1997, visits to alternative health care practitioners exceeded total visits to all conventional primary care physicians. The number of clinics and hospitals that integrate some modalities of CAM alongside conventional medicine is growing rapidly. The Institute of Medicine, a part of the National Academy of Sciences, has held recent conferences on the values of both CAM and Integrative Medicine. The NIH is using significant resources to fund research in this area.
This development, of course, is raising legal issues. There is a growing but still unsettled body of law on this subject. Some but not all CAM modalities are now licensed and regulated by at least some states. Federal regulatory bodies, such as the FDA and FTC are trying, within the limits of their statutory authority, to protect what they perceive to be the interests of the public. Yet, they come at the problem through conventional, rather than alternative, eyes. Conventional law is based upon protecting the public from purveyors of the proverbial "snake oil" frauds. And to an extent this law is being used to keep out alternatives to the established health-care modalities. This seminar studies the tensions, legal, economic, and social, of this struggle as it unfolds. This seminar covers several areas of law including administrative law, medical malpractice, informed consent, FDA/FTC law, among others. A paper is required.
| Course No. |
Cr. |
Faculty |
Room / Days / From-To |
Exam/Paper |
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Fall
2013 Schedule
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LAWG-065-08
[Limit: 2]
(CRN #: 13535)
View Textbooks
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3 |
Cohn, Sherman /
Bulen, James A. /
Fortsch, Gregory W. |
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Paper |
LAWJ-065-08
[Limit: 9]
(CRN #: 13825)
View Textbooks
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3 |
Cohn, Sherman /
Bulen, James A. /
Fortsch, Gregory W. |
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WR |
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