米非司酮,优先权和公共卫生联邦制。

IF 2.5 2区 哲学 Q1 ETHICS
Patricia J Zettler, Annamarie Beckmeyer, Beatrice L Brown, Ameet Sarpatwari
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引用次数: 2

摘要

2022年6月24日,最高法院发表了一项意见,五名法官投票推翻了罗伊诉韦德案。甚至在最终意见发表之前,学者和倡导者就已经开始考虑可能减轻该决定预期的有害后果的法律策略。其中一个策略是挑战国家对食品和药物管理局(FDA)批准的终止妊娠药物的限制,以先发制人的理由。这篇文章首先探讨了这些挑战将如何进行——考虑到特定药物的限制和完全禁止堕胎——认为有令人信服的法律依据,法院应该据此得出结论,许多州的限制是先发制人的。重要的是,尽管这些州的限制是在关于生殖保健的更大辩论中出现的,但这远非各州寻求监管处方药的唯一领域。长期以来,各州对药品的监管方式与FDA有所不同,可以说近年来这种情况越来越严重。因此,本文调查了堕胎方面的先发制人挑战可能对州药物监管的其他领域产生的影响,论证了公共卫生联邦制的好处不必因堕胎领域成功的先发制人挑战而受到损害。
本文章由计算机程序翻译,如有差异,请以英文原文为准。
Mifepristone, preemption, and public health federalism.

On June 24, 2022, the Supreme Court issued an opinion in which five justices voted to overturn Roe v Wade. Even before the final opinion issued, scholars and advocates had begun to consider legal strategies that might mitigate the decision's anticipated harmful consequences. One such strategy involves challenging state restrictions on Food and Drug Administration (FDA)-approved pregnancy termination drugs on preemption grounds. This article begins by exploring how these challenges might fare-considering both drug-specific restrictions and complete bans on abortion-arguing that there are compelling legal grounds on which courts should conclude that many state restrictions are preempted. Importantly, although these state restrictions have arisen within a larger debate about reproductive health care, this is far from the only area in which states seek to regulate prescription drugs. States have long regulated drugs in ways that diverge from FDA, arguably increasingly so in recent years. Accordingly, the article investigates the implications that preemption challenges in the abortion context may have for other areas of state drug regulation, making the case that the benefits of public health federalism need not be undermined by successful preemption challenges in the abortion arena.

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来源期刊
Journal of Law and the Biosciences
Journal of Law and the Biosciences Medicine-Medicine (miscellaneous)
CiteScore
7.40
自引率
5.90%
发文量
35
审稿时长
13 weeks
期刊介绍: The Journal of Law and the Biosciences (JLB) is the first fully Open Access peer-reviewed legal journal focused on the advances at the intersection of law and the biosciences. A co-venture between Duke University, Harvard University Law School, and Stanford University, and published by Oxford University Press, this open access, online, and interdisciplinary academic journal publishes cutting-edge scholarship in this important new field. The Journal contains original and response articles, essays, and commentaries on a wide range of topics, including bioethics, neuroethics, genetics, reproductive technologies, stem cells, enhancement, patent law, and food and drug regulation. JLB is published as one volume with three issues per year with new articles posted online on an ongoing basis.
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