Public Health Literacy for Lawyers: Teaching Population-Based Legal Analysis
Throughout the world of public health, and environmental health in particular, we work with lawyers; yet, many of us remain unaware of recent developments in the law and legal scholarship that may be critical to the success of our work. Many lawyers, even those working on major public health challenges such as tobacco control, are similarly unaware of relevant changes in the world of science. There is a new but growing effort to provide lawyers and the legal community with deeper understanding of public health and the science that guides it. I urge the public health and environmental health community to participate.
Recently, I have watched how lawyers in the Justice Department have handled the Vaccine Injury Compensation Program, perhaps unaware of the population perspective underlying immunization; these lawyers have done what they are trained to do--be adversaries. This no-fault compensation program was created as a way to eliminate fear of injury as an obstacle to protecting a population, but lawyers have routinely contested the claims for injured children covered by the statute. A little public health training would have made a big difference in how these cases have been handled and how the lawyers responded to the claims.
Over the last 30 years, law in the United States has grounded individual rights in the Constitution, statutes, court decisions, and accompanying legal scholarship. This tradition protects all Americans from certain threats. However, public health, which must protect Americans from threats to their health, has not prospered in a society focused on individuals and curative medicine. American law emphasizes the rights of individuals, attending little to common issues of groups or societal concerns. One way to give new attention to public health would be to elaborate within American jurisprudence a new foundation in the law: population-based legal analysis.
By tradition, American law attends to persons, including corporate persons, in ways that have no analog for populations. The science of epidemiology did not exist at the inception of our legal system, but today in public policy--including legislation, regulation, and litigation--debate centers on matters of population-based science. Congress is considering tort reform; the Data Quality Act (Office of Management and Budget 2002) produced a large number of new federal regulations about how government agencies may use scientific data; Daubert hearings (Project on Scientific Knowledge and Public Policy 2003), based on a 10-year-old Supreme Court decision and its progeny, dominate product liability and toxic tort litigation; and the American Law Institute is revisiting its Restatement of Torts (American Law Institute 2003) that proposes to tell judges and others how scientists determine causation. How can legal education catch up?
For the last few years, I have collaborated with colleagues at Northeastern University School of Law (Boston, MA), first in creating a JD/MPH (Juris Doctor/Master of Public Health) dual degree program (Tufts School of Medicine 2001), and then the Public Health Advocacy Institute (Boston, MA). One of the problems we have taken on is public health literacy for lawyers--how to introduce law students and lawyers to the population perspective of public health and how to do so by teaching them public health context, public health powers, and public health methods. (This effort, which was explored at a national meeting, "Public Health Literacy for Lawyers" held 11-13 April in Boston, Massachusetts, is hindered by law school admission standards that do not require any special quantitative ability, although these skills are increasingly required in many aspects of legal practice, for example, for handling epidemiologic evidence.)
Some have suggested additional elective courses on public health topics (e.g., environmental law, HIV/AIDS, food and drug law, etc.) (Goodman et al. 2002), but only students already committed to addressing these issues enroll. Thus, a new strategy has been proposed (Parmet and Robbins 2002), one that incorporates public health materials in core law school courses such as torts, constitutional law, and administrative law. As part of the exposition and discussion of major teaching cases, law professors would use the long-neglected underlying public health facts and analysis originally associated with them. For this public health slant to be attractive to legal educators and law schools, a scholarly approach is necessary--one that expands application of population-based analysis in the law and then demonstrates its utility to lawyers.
Population-based legal analysis, the core of teaching public health to lawyers, can be useful to lawyers beyond public health problems. Environmental lawyers and scholars are already coping with epidemiology and causation issues. Lawyers, more generally, will find that their understanding of populations contributes broadly to comprehension of the law involving groups--not limited to studying disease and injury-causing exposures and societal interventions. Legal scholarship will be able to use population science to address legal questions of disparate impact and discrimination by race, age, and sex. Labor law, civil rights law, and even telecommunications law all focus on allocations and thus populations.
Legal scholars are moving toward conscious development of population-based legal analysis, but we in public health, environmental health, and epidemiology can contribute our support and talents to the effort. We must provide the public health background, critical evidence, methodologic analysis, and epidemiologic details to engage lawyers in the public health issues that underlie dozens of classic law school teaching cases. Progress in our own fields may depend on well-educated legal allies.
Work on population-based legal analysis has started, and there are precedents for bringing new scholarly domains into the law. Starting 25 years ago, with generous funding from conservative foundations, the law and economics movement successfully introduced microeconomic theory and the logic of markets to legal scholarship and education. Economics, as understood by most lawyers, is far removed from calculations and equations used by econometricians, but as a field, American law accepts the notion that neoclassical economics is a way to understand and assess human decisions, particularly choices of risks and benefits. Market doctrines are now built into legal decision making (Parmet and Robbins 2002). A similar concerted effort will reward public health by building our concern for populations into American law.
I thank W.E. Parmet, R.A. Daynard, W.K. Mariner, and P. Freeman for their contributions to my thinking and for reviewing drafts of this editorial.
Anthony Robbins
Department of Family Medicine & Community Health
Tufts University School of Medicine
Boston, Massachusetts
E-mail: anthony.robbins@tufts.edu
Anthony Robbins, a professor of Public Health at Tufts University School of Medicine and co-editor of the Journal of Public Health Policy, served as Vermont State Health Commissioner, executive director of the Colorado Department of Health, director of the National Institute for Occupational Safety and Health, Principal Professional Staff Member for Health on the House Energy and Commerce Committee, director of the National Vaccine Program, editor of Public Health Reports, and president of the American Public Health Association.
References
American Law Institute. 2003. Restatement of the Law Third, Torts: Liability for Physical Harm (Basic Principles). Available: http://www.ali.org/ali/Torts_Physharm.htm [accessed 30 July 2003].
Goodman RA, Lazzarini Z, Moulton AD, Burris S, Elster NR, Locke PA, et al. 2002. Other branches of science are necessary to form a lawyer: teaching public health law in law school. J Law Med Ethics 30(2):298-301.
Office of Management and Budget. 2002. Guidelines for ensuring and maximizing the quality, objectivity, utility, and integrity of information dissemination by federal agencies. Fed Reg 67:8452-8460.
Parmet WE, Robbins A. 2002. A rightful place for public health in American law. J Law Med Ethics 30(2):302-304.
Project on Scientific Knowledge and Public Policy. 2003. Daubert: The Most Influential Supreme Court Ruling You've Never Heard Of. Boston, MA:Tellus Institute. Available: http://www.defendingscience.org/pdf/DaubertReport.pdf [accessed 10 September 2003].
Tufts School of Medicine. 2001. Graduate Programs in Public Health: JD/MPH Track. Available: http://www.tufts.edu/med/gpph/JointDegrees/JD/index.html [accessed 30 July 2003].
Note from the Editors: Full Disclosure Policy
[ citation in pubmed ] [ related articles]
EHP has a long-standing requirement for authors to disclose competing financial interests. Corresponding authors are required to submit a declaration of competing financial interests on behalf of all authors involved. However, until recently we did not publish this information with the article. In May 2003, we began publishing the authors' disclosure declarations. The statements provide either a disclosure of competing financial interests along with a brief description, a declaration of no competing interests, or a declination to provide such information.
Our full disclosure policy was established because we are mindful of our obligation to provide responsible and effective oversight to manuscripts published in the journal. We believe it is vital for EHP to ensure that information published in the journal is presented in an objective and balanced manner and that readers have the opportunity to judge for themselves whether bias has been introduced because of any competing interests of the authors. EHP's policy of disclosure applies to research articles, commentaries, reviews, and correspondence. Although full disclosure is important, we believe that a decision to publish an article should not be based on a declaration of a competing interest.
Our requirements for full disclosure also extend to reviewers and editors, who must disclose to the Editor-in-Chief any competing financial interests that could be construed as affecting their evaluation of a manuscript. Reviewers or editors might be asked to recuse themselves, when appropriate. However, reviewers and editors are not automatically disqualified because of a competing financial interest.
Competing financial interests may include, but are not limited to, grant support, employment (recent, present, or anticipated), and personal financial interests by the author(s), immediate family members, or institutional affiliations that may gain or lose financially through publication. Increasingly, researchers are compensated by a host of financial arrangements such as travel, consultancies, advisory board positions, patent and royalty arrangements, stock shares, bonds, and the like. Diversified mutual funds or investment trusts do not constitute a competing financial interest. Further, authors are required to certify that their freedom to design, conduct, interpret, and publish research is not compromised by any controlling sponsor as a condition of review and publication.
Since disclosure statements have been published with EHP articles, we have received comments from some readers questioning the accuracy of competing financial interest declarations made by a few authors. As is the case for most journals, EHP is not in the position to confirm the accuracy of disclosure statements made by our authors. We rely on the veracity of the authors. However, authors can expect scrutiny of their statements by EHP readers and the authors' own employers. We welcome this assistance as well as letters to the editor that address alleged inaccuracies of competing interest declarations.
Scientists are aware of the absolute necessity to maintain personal integrity, upon which science and our careers depend. It is this integrity that full disclosure of competing interests is intended to preserve. Therefore, it is imperative that authors and readers understand that a disclosure of a competing interest does not imply that the information in the article is questionable or the conclusions biased. Authors must also understand that the omission of a pertinent financial interest, that is later revealed could deal a severe blow to the authors' integrity and research.
We can expect that the beneficial mixing of academic, industrial, and government-funded research will grow because of the complexity of biomedical and environmental health research. With this growth will come an increase in the competing financial interests of researchers. Journal editors and authors must work together to ensure the continuation of open communication and scientific objectivity.
Thomas J. Goehl
Editor-in-Chief, EHP
Research Triangle Park, North Carolina
E-mail: goehl@niehs.nih.gov
James G. Burkhart
Science Editor, EHP
Research Triangle Park, North Carolina
E-mail: burkhart@niehs.nih.gov
Last Updated: October 21, 2003