2012

Deadline Extended for Critical Opportunities Submissions

We are now accepting submissions for the Critical Opportunities event at the 2012 AcademyHealth Public Health Systems Research (PHSR) Interest Group Meeting.

The first in a series of three Critical Opportunities events this year, PHLR is hosting a "poetry slam"-style reception where multiple pitches will be presented. Presenters will be filmed pitching their own great idea for using law as a tool to promote public health.

Submissions are due June 6, 2012.

  • To make your submission, visit our submissions page.
  • To learn more about the Critical Opportunities initiative and watch some of the past successful pitches, visit our introduction page.
Public Health Law Research Opens 4th Funding Round

Philadelphia (Feb. 8, 2012) -- PHLR, a national program of the Robert Wood Johnson Foundation, has released its fourth call for proposals on studies that focus on the effects of laws and policies on public health.

The new call for proposals is available online: http://www.rwjf.org/applications/solicited/cfp.jsp?ID=21388

The deadline for submitting brief proposals is April 4, 2012 (3 p.m. EST).

As much as $2.5 million is available in this round of funding. Short-term studies will be funded up to $150,000 each for as long as 18 months. Complex studies will be funded up to $300,000 and for as long as 24 months.

While PHLR funds studies that mainly focus on the intersection between law and public health, researchers from other disciplines, such as medicine, economics, sociology, psychology, and public policy and administration are encouraged to be part of multi-disciplinary teams of applicants. 

PHLR's previous three calls for proposals were issued in 2009, 2010, and 2011.  Thirty-eight studies have been funded to date, addressing a wide range of legal and public health issues, including: effective legal decision-making during public health emergencies; issues related to the public health infrastructure at the state and local levels; the influence of hospital community benefit requirements on public health activities, and the impact of lead laws on public health.

Scott Burris, JD, professor of law and director of the Center for Health Law, Policy and Practice at Temple University, directs the national program office for PHLR.

"We hope that these studies will result in a strengthened evidence base for critical public health and legal issues. At its core, public health law research seeks to bridge the information gap between the law and public health outcomes. We see this research as a means to improve public health in the United States by helping policy-makers make more informed decisions," Burris said.

Applicants to the new CFP will have access to methodology and other technical resources, like datasets, on this website.

The Robert Wood Johnson Foundation focuses on the pressing health and health care issues facing our country. As the nation's largest philanthropic organization devoted exclusively to improving the health and health care of all Americans, the Foundation works with a diverse group of organizations and individuals to identify solutions and achieve comprehensive, meaningful and timely change. For more than 35 years, the Foundation has brought experience, commitment, and a rigorous, balanced approach to the problems that affect the health and health care of those it serves. When it comes to helping Americans lead healthier lives and get the care they need, the Foundation expects to make a difference in your lifetime.

The Temple Center for Health Policy, Law and Practice examines critical legal issues in public health and healthcare through interdisciplinary research projects, courses and problem-solving partnerships with academics and community leaders both locally and internationally.

Public Health Law Research Program Funds 15 New Studies

Philadelphia, January 24, 2012  -- The public health effects of laws  on issues such as food safety, the health impacts of local power plants, youth concussions, and monitoring prescription drug use and access will be investigated through 15 new research projects  funded by the Robert Wood Johnson Foundation's (RWJF) Public Health Law Research (PHLR) program.

The grants announced today total more than $2 million. They include short-term studies of specific laws or regulations, long-term evaluations and time-sensitive studies, and legal datasets. 

PHLR's aim is to promote the effective use of law to improve public health. Established in 2009, the program has funded 29 studies and several reviews of existing scientific evidence on major public health challenges.

Research studies already funded by PHLR are aimed at answering important questions: Can courts specializing in family-related cases reduce domestic violence and improve the health of women and children? Can public health policies reduce consumption of salt and help to reduce high blood pressure? And can a federal law reduce public health problems caused by unsafe or toxic levels of lead in drinking water?

"Each time we fund a new set of studies, we anticipate that the evidence will reach the policy debate. PHLR's objective is to be the place to go for answers to public health policy questions," said PHLR Director Scott Burris, JD.

"At the same time, PHLR is also funding studies that create legal datasets. These datasets will be available for researchers to study the public health effects of different legal and policy approaches used by states or cities. Such studies will help lawmakers understand how changes in laws and policies affect public health. The datasets already underway will also help train researchers to create their own legal datasets, and improve research methods," according to Burris.

PHLR is funded by RWJF as a part of the foundation's targeted public health strategy which includes a focus on advancing the use of law and policy to improve health, and supporting research that enables public health officials and policy makers to make informed decisions to better protect the health of their communities.

The Robert Wood Johnson Foundation focuses on the pressing health and health care issues facing our country. As the nation's largest philanthropic organization devoted exclusively to improving the health and health care of all Americans, the Foundation works with a diverse group of organizations and individuals to identify solutions and achieve comprehensive, meaningful and timely change. For more than 35 years, the Foundation has brought experience, commitment, and a rigorous, balanced approach to the problems that affect the health and health care of those it serves. When it comes to helping Americans lead healthier lives and get the care they need, the Foundation expects to make a difference in your lifetime.

 

The newly funded grantees include:

Chris Collins, MPP; Don Des Jarlais, PhD -- amfAR, The Foundation for AIDS Research: "Barriers to Reason: Laws Impacting HIV Prevention Efforts Among Injection Drug Users in the United States"

Allison Robertson, PhD, MPH; Marvin Swartz, MD -- Duke University: "Do Brief Incarcerations Before Jail Diversion Enhance its Legal Leverage and Improve Outcomes Among People with Serious Mental Illness in Connecticut?"

Rebecca Katz, PhD, MPH; Stephanie David, JD, MPH -- George Washington University: "State Foodborne Illness Surveillance and Response Laws: Compilation and Analysis"

Michael Livermore, JD; George Thurston, ScD -- New York University: "The Effect of Peak-Shaving Regulations on the Activity, Toxic Emissions, and Health Impacts of Local Power Plants"

Bernard Black, BA, MA, JD; David Hyman, BA, JD, MD -- Northwestern University: "Does Mandatory Public Infection Reporting Affect Infection Rates?"

Susan Mangold, JD; Gregory Kapcar, MPA -- Research Foundation of State University of New York on behalf of University at Buffalo: "Measuring the Impact of Sources and Types of Funding on Health Care Outcomes for Children in Foster Care in Ohio"

Nabarun Dasgupta, MPH; Corey Davis, JD, MSPH -- University of North Carolina at Chapel Hill: "Reassessing the Effectiveness of Prescription Monitoring Programs"

Jeffrey Fagan, PhD, Amanda Geller, PhD, MEng, BS -- Trustees of Columbia University in the City of New York: "Mental Health and Proactive Policing: Individual and Community Effects"

Fernando Wilson, PhD -- University of North Texas Health Science Center: "Electronic Device Use and Distracted Driving Fatalities: Do State Regulations Matter?"

Christina Porucznik, PhD, MSPH; Brian Sauer, PhD -- University of Utah: "Did Changes in Controlled Substance Prescribing Licensing Lead to Changes in Opioid Prescribing or Adverse Outcomes?"

Frederick Rivara, MD, MPH -- University of Washington: "Evaluation of a Law Mandating Reporting of Concussions by High School Athletes"

Cynthia Hallett, MPH -- Americans for Nonsmokers' Rights Foundation: "Enhancing Public Health Laws Datasets: U.S. Tobacco Control Laws Database"

Christopher Tarver Robertson, PhD, JD; Christina Cutshaw, PhD -- University of Arizona: "Housing Insecurity, Foreclosures, and Public Health"

William Fisher, PhD; John Petrila, JD, LLM -- University of Massachusetts Lowell: "Creation of a Legal Database on State Involuntary In-Patient and Out-Patient Civil Commitment Laws"

Scott D. Rhodes, PhD; Mark A. Hall, JD -- Wake Forest University: "Analyzing the Impact of Immigration Enforcement by Local Officials on Access to Care Among Latinos"

 

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PHLR and Temple University to co-sponsor conference on law enforcement and public health

Public Health Law Research and Temple University Beasley School of Law are co-sponsoring LEPH 2012: The First International Conference on Law Enforcement and Public Health to be held in Melbourne, Australia, November 11-13, 2012.  

A major international conference in Melbourne in November 2012 on the broad theme of the inter-relationship of law enforcement and public health, with invited papers from world experts in specific aspects of this relationship, from multiple sectors and disciplines; and case studies of successful collaborations of police and public health across a wide range of issues. 

Objectives: 

Exemplify and demonstrate the multifaceted involvement of law enforcement across a wide range of public health topics and endeavours, (2) To provide teaching material for development of courses in the theory and practice of law enforcement and public health, (3) To further build networks and collaborations between different disciplines and sectors, promoting ongoing collaborative research and research partnerships.

Methods: 

Development of discussion, scoping and briefing materials on different aspects of the law enforcement and public health relationship; Invitation of papers from experts selected on the basis of these scoping exercises; What Works? Invitation of presentations from collaborative programs between police and public health, to examine examples of successful collaboration, and begin the process of identification of principles of successful collaboration; Publication of the papers and case studies as the Proceedings of the Conference – potentially useful thereafter as a textbook in the subject.

Target audiences 

We envisage interest in this conference and these processes across a wide range of academic disciplines and among police and public security agencies globally; but also among those charged with addressing complex social issues which have untoward health implications, as for example local and state/provincial governments.

For more information, please contact Nick Crofts, Conference Director.

Event Date & Time: 
Sun, 11/11/2012 - 8:00am - Wed, 11/14/2012 - 6:00pm

Additional URL(s):
Policing and Public Health

PHLR Awards Scholarships to Researchers for 2012 Annual Meeting

PHLR has awarded five travel scholarships to public health law researchers and practitioners to attend the 2012 PHLR Annual Grantee Meeting in New Orleans. This meeting provides a forum for current PHLR grantees to share research progress and findings, discuss methodological concerns and innovations, and identify effective ways to disseminate research results to inform public health law practice and policy debates.

The 2012 Scholarship Recipients:

Helen Wu, PhDc, MPhil, MS
RAND Corporation

Heather A. McCabe, JD, MSW
Indiana University School of Social Work

Damika Webb, JD
Temple University

Marie Fallon, EdD, MHSA
National Association of Local Boards of Health

Johnathon Ehsani, PhDc, MHS, MIPH
University of Michigan

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