Areas of law that may fall under the umbrella of health law include: •
Contract law •
Medical malpractice •
Medical law •
Administrative law •
Public health law •
Consent In the United States, medicine and the law are interconnected. The law intervenes to regulate the duty to treat, which essentially is ruled by
contract law. Doctors have the right to refuse treatment, in the absence of an emergency, when no previous doctor-patient relationship existed. However, according to EMTALA, doctors cannot discriminate because of disability, abandon a patient, or refuse their services in an emergency.
Board certification Health law was first adopted as a separate legal specialty by The Florida Bar's Board of Legal Specialization in 1995. Attorneys could become board-certified in health law and could hold themselves out as a "legal specialist" or "legal expert." In 2002, Texas adopted a similar program.
Education Attorneys may obtain additional education in the practice of health law via postgraduate Master of Laws (LL.M.) programs available in some law schools. The LL.M. demonstrates a higher level of course work and study than the basic law degree (J.D. or B.S.L.). Some law schools with graduate law programs offer a general LL.M. with course emphasis on health law, global health law, public health law, forensic medicine, or similar studies.
Malpractice Medical malpractice is also an area where law and medicine are interconnected, which relates to the standard of care, where custom similar locality rule may apply. There may be different schools of thought, where reputability is the issue at hand and alternative theories that can be based on the hand formula. There are other aspects of importance within the area of medical malpractice, such as causation, where medical probability and loss of chance are present. Damages, where the value of life and tort reforms appear to differ, and affirmative defenses, within the doctrine of informed consent, where waivers cannot suffice. There are rules such as the discovery rule that states that the statute of limitations starts to run when the injury has been discovered and not when it took place. ==See also==