8,858 research outputs found

    The Justice Mission and Mental Health Law

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    Mental health law\u27s concern with justice, so much a part of the discussion of civil commitment, the insanity defense and other traditional mental health subjects, has been a neglected subject in one important area. Malpractice claims against mental health professionals commonly are slow, expensive and embarrassing for the professional and the injured. Processing these claims creates great stress on plaintiffs and defendants alike. The legal system has been insensitive to the harm it inflicts on mental health patients who pursue malpractice claims. Too often even patients\u27 lawyers have also ignored the potential for harm. Because the current system conflicts with the most fundamental values of the mental health professions themselves, those professions should take the lead in reforming the processing of mental health claims, or at least offer alternative forms which are more nearly consistent with the values and principles of mental health care

    Constitutional Privacy in Psychotherapy

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    Medical and Psychotherapy Privileges and Confidentiality: On Giving With One Hand and Removing With the Other

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    This Article reviews both the giving and the taking away: the protections afforded to confidentiality by privileges and legal duties, and the way those protections are eroded. The duties of professionals and others to maintain confidences are noted, but testimonial privileges are emphasized. This Article proposes reforms in the way we try to protect confidentiality and suggests that the protection of therapy confidences be dealt with as a coherent whole (privileges and obligations of confidentiality should be dealt with together). Exceptions to privileges should be reduced and narrowed, and federal law should recognize the desirability of a consistent approach to confidentiality. Perhaps most importantly, the transmission of some confidential information to third parties should carry with it a duty which would require the recipient to maintain confidentiality ( extended confidentiality )

    Accreditation Revisited: ABA Reexamination of Approved Law Schools

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    A Crazy System: Mental Health Care Delivery in America

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    The thesis of the Article is that there has been, and is, a large unmet need for mental health services in America, and that the mental health care delivery system has been so poorly put together that it is incapable of meeting a major portion of the need for services

    The Fourth Industrial Revolution and Legal Education

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    A “Fourth Industrial Revolution” (4IR) will dramatically change current law students’ careers. Innovations in technology, business, and social structures will require different and more sophisticated legal services. Law school graduates will be responsible for harnessing, encouraging, and establishing legal controls that offer society the benefits of these new technologies while limiting the undesirable side effects. At the same time, the recurring, repetitive practice of law will begin to disappear as more work is done much cheaper and better by machines. The 4IR presents extraordinary opportunities for law schools, the legal profession, and graduates, but it also presents significant challenges. To prepare students for professional practice and continuous improvement of the justice system, law schools will have to adjust students’ education and focus the curriculum on ensuring new competencies. Changing law school curriculum is generally more evolutionary than dramatic, but there is not enough time to slowly begin to prepare students for their professional lives in the 4IR. The Article concludes with several ideas about accelerating the process

    Mental Health Malpractice in the 1990s

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    This article analyzes the current levels and kinds of mental health malpractice claims. It also discusses the direction of individual and institutional malpractice in the 1990s and considers potential reforms. Finally, the article argues that the current system is inadequate to deal with many mental health injuries and that patient plaintiffs should have the option of pursuing malpractice claims in a private, less threatening forum
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