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Course Details

Comparative Health Law Systems (Corbett)

Spring 2024   LAW 904-001  

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Faculty
Angus Corbett

Adjunct Professor

corbetta@law.upenn.edu
Additional Information

Skills Training
Oral Presentations
Team Projects

Grading
20% Participation,
60% Paper,
20% Other (The course includes case studies of health systems in a number of high-income and low and-middle-income countries. Students will be responsible for working together to present case studies of two countries. These presentations will be worth 20% of the grade for the course.)

Satisfies Senior Writing Requirement

No
The final paper for this course will require students to use comparative analysis to propose a research question that focuses on outlining the pathways that guide and influence the goals and the direction of the health system in the United States. This research question may be directed either at analyzing the pathways that guide and influence the health system or the role of law and legal institutions in influencing these pathways.

Location

Class meets in person.

Course Continuity
Students are encouraged to stay home if you are ill or experience flu-like symptoms. If you miss a class for any reason, it is still your responsibility to make up the work missed.

I offer the following to students who miss class due to illness:

- Class sessions are regularly recorded. If you are absent due to illness or some other unavoidable circumstance, email me and I can send you an email with instructions for accessing the recording for the class session(s) you missed.

- If you are absent, due to illness or some other unavoidable circumstance, email me and I can ask for volunteers among your classmates to share their notes with you.

- When you are better, please make an appointment to meet with me and I will review/answer questions about what you missed.

Meeting Times/Location
R 4:30PM - 6:30PM
Tanenbaum Hall 142

Category
Seminar

Credits
3.0

The escalating cost of health care and the limited coverage provided by the health system represent challenges to systems of law, regulation, and governance in the U.S. This course uses comparative analysis to address a series of questions to better understand the nature and extent of these challenges. It will ask the following questions. What are the forces that drive the U.S. health system and why have stakeholders in the health system been resistant to the adoption of Universal Health Coverage? What are the system dynamics that support high levels of spending on health care and high levels of consumption of health care services alongside health outcomes that are materially worse than in many other high-income countries? What role does the legal system play in supporting and regulating a health system that produces these high levels of spending and consumption alongside materially worse outcomes? The course uses comparative analysis to ask new and different questions about the dynamics of the U.S. health system by developing an understanding of the dynamics of other health systems. The goal of comparative analysis is not to advocate for the adoption of Universal Health Coverage, it is rather to map out some of the pathways for health care reform and the role of legal institutions in framing and instigating health care reform in the U.S.

Course Concentrations

Health Law Learning outcomes: Demonstrate a core understanding of health law and policy; Perform legal analysis in the context of health law and policy; Communicate effectively on topics related to health law and policy; Demonstrate an understanding of the interconnection among health law and policy and issues of access to services, public and private financing of health industries, and the political and economic issues surrounding issues of health law and health services.

Perspectives on the Law Learning outcomes: Demonstrate an understanding of how the law affects, and is affected by, the individual course topic; Perform legal analysis in the context of the individual course topic; Communicate effectively on the legal and other aspects of the individual course topic; Demonstrate the ability to use other disciplines to analyze legal issues relevant to the individual course topic, including economics, philosophy, and sociology, as appropriate.

Administrative and Regulatory Law Learning outcomes: Demonstrate a core understanding of administrative and regulatory law and the administrative process, including the role of statutory authorization and work of administrative agencies; Perform legal analysis in the context of administrative and regulatory law; Communicate effectively on topics related to administrative and regulatory law; Demonstrate an understanding of the role administrative and regulatory law play in our legal system and in society as a whole.


Textbooks

"Which Country Has the World's Best Health Care?" by Ezekiel Emanuel
Edition: March 2022
Publisher: Hachette Book Group
ISBN: 9781541797758
Required