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What is the state’s responsibility for the health of its citizens?
- How should the law regulate new reproductive technologies?
- Who should decide whether a seriously ill baby lives or dies?
- Should we able to choose an assisted death?
- Does the law do enough to protect health in the workplace?
- Should doctors be allowed to use expe...
This course is about health law, broadly defined, and the inequalities that can manifest themselves within it. It addresses some of the most topical ethical dilemmas facing society:<br/><br/>What is the state’s responsibility for the health of its citizens?<br/>- How should the law regulate new reproductive technologies?<br/><br/><br/>- Who should decide whether a seriously ill baby lives or dies?<br/><br/><br/>- Should we able to choose an assisted death?<br/><br/><br/>- Does the law do enough to protect health in the workplace?<br/><br/><br/>- Should doctors be allowed to use experimental treatment?<br/><br/><br/>These are just a few examples of the questions we will be exploring on this course. Two core modules on health law will introduce you to the law’s involvement in regulating health and health care, while modules on inequalities in health, and human rights and health care are also compulsory to reflect the rights and equality focus of this degree. You can then choose optional modules to reflect your interests such as clinical negligence, mental health law, employment law, or bioethics. <br/><br/>The interface between health and law will be of interest to those from both a legal background and a health care background. Our degree will offer the opportunity for lawyers, medics, nurses and others to share ideas and learn from other disciplines. The course is taught by leading researchers on health law and there will be opportunities to attend guest lectures and seminars organised by the Centre for Rights and Equality in Health Law. The courses development within a research centre offers distinctive connections with ongoing research projects, doctoral students and a thriving research environment focused on health and the law. <br/><br/>Your research skills will be developed with an optional module on a research topic in health law, which is a distinctive way in which we aim to support your research development and will provide support for the dissertation element of the course, alongside skills seminars, and expert supervision for a final dissertation. <br/><br/>This degree is for you if you are interested in a focused medical law programme as well as having broader interests in health generally, and the issues of human rights, ethics and inequalities. It offers a core focus on traditional medical law but one supplemented by inclusion of modules reflecting human rights law, bioethics, and employment law as well as issues of topical importance and relevant to health care policy and litigation. Thus, the course addresses issues of high importance in the interaction between health, the law and public policy which - as COVID has demonstrated - is of critical importance due to public health and fiscal implications. <br/><br/>This postgraduate qualification can also be taken by students studying for an undergraduate medical degree as an intercalated LLM (iLLM).
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Course Details
Information
Study Mode
Part-time
Duration
5 Years
Start Date
09/2025
Campus
Main Site
Varied
Application deadline
Provider Details
Codes/info
Course Code
Unknown
Institution Code
L34
Points of Entry
Unknown
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