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From Health Sciences Center - University of Louisville Public Health News The new Center for Partnership in Public Health Law will coordinate professional education for a range of related professionals including public health officials, law enforcement personnel, prosecutors, public health lawyers and judges. “Most of the public health laws in the “Most of the legal work involving public health is performed by professionals who do not specialize in public health law,” said Mark Rothstein, institute director and principal investigator at the center. “As the core public health competencies expand to include health informatics and genomics, among other factors, there is a risk that legal actors will be ill-equipped to evaluate the severity, urgency and quality of the evidence of emerging risks to the public health.” The center will address the needs of judges and lawyers who are unfamiliar with the provisions of public health laws in their particular jurisdictions. With the rise of Severe Acute Respiratory Syndrome, bioterrorism and similar threats, center faculty members say it is imperative that judges and others responsible for enforcing state and local public health laws be prepared. According to Rothstein, few courts have considered issues of isolation, quarantine or medical surveillance in recent years, nor have they been required to balance the protection of public health with due process and privacy issues. Along with Rothstein and Palmer, institute professor T. Howard Stone and Linda L. Chezem of The center began operation this month and is working with its partners and the CDC to develop a strategic plan for increasing the public health law training capacity of such groups as the American Bar Association, National Association of State Judicial Educators and the National Association of Local Boards of Health. © Copyright 2012 by University of Louisville |