User:BD2412/Vaccine law resources/VVI sources

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  • Alexandra M. Stewart of The George Washington University Milken Institute School of Public Health
  • Cason D. Schmit of the Texas A&M University School of Public Health
  • John “Lou” Michels of Lewis Brisbois Bisgaard & Smith LLP, and previously of the U.S. Air Force Judge Advocate General’s Corps
  • Frederick R. Ball and Elinor Hart Murárová, Statutory and Regulatory Controls for Drug Development, in Michael E. Clark, ed., Pharmaceutical and Medical Device Law: Regulation of Research, Development, and Marketing 39 (2d ed. 2015).
  • Susan Brink, “What's The Real Story About The Milkmaid And The Smallpox Vaccine?” NPR (February 1, 2018) available at https://www.npr.org/sections/goatsandsoda/2018/02/01/582370199/whats-the-real-story-about-the-milkmaid-and-the-smallpox-vaccine.
  • Amanda D. Castel, et al., College and University Compliance With a Required Meningococcal Vaccination Law, 56 J. Am. College Health 119–127 (Sep.-Oct. 2007).
  • Elizabeth J. Chen, Equal Protection: Why the HPV Vaccine Should be Mandated for Both Boys and Girls, 38 Wash. U.J.L. & Pol’y 289 (2012), avail at http://openscholarship.wustl.edu/law_journal_law_policy/vol38/iss1/9
  • Anthony Ciolli, Mandatory School Vaccinations: The Role of Tort Law, 81 Yale J. Biology & Med. 129 (2008).
  • James Colgrove, “Immunity for the people: the challenge of achieving high vaccine coverage in American history.
  • https://www.mailman.columbia.edu/people/our-faculty/jc988 jc988@columbia.edu
  • Nicolas Cortes-Penfield, “Mandatory Influenza Vaccination for Health Care Workers as the New Standard of Care: A Matter of Patient Safety and Nonmaleficent Practice,” 104 Am. J. Pub. Health. 11 (Nov. 2014)
  • Nicola Davis, “New technology could allow multiple vaccines to be delivered in single jab,” The Guardian (Sept.. 14, 107), available at https://www.theguardian.com/society/2017/sep/14/multiple-time-delayed-drugs-could-be-given-in-single-injection-say-scientists
  • Eliana Dockterman, "Faith Healing Parents Jailed After Second Child's Death," Time (February 19, 2014).
  • R. Gordon Douglas and Vijay B. Samant, “The Vaccine Industry,” in Stanley A. Plotkin, Ed., Plotkin's Vaccines 41 (7th ed. 2017).
  • Ezekial J. Emanuel and Alan Wertheimer, “Who Should Get Influenza Vaccine When Not All Can?
  • Kristen A. Feemster, Vaccines: What Everyone Needs to Know 7 (2017).
  • Theresa M. Finn and William Egan, “Vaccine Additives and Manufacturing Residuals in Vaccines Licensed in the United States,” in Stanley A. Plotkin, Ed., Plotkin's Vaccines 75 (7th ed. 2017)
  • Maggie Fox, “Detroit mom jailed for refusing court order to vaccinate child,” Today (October 5, 2017), available at https://www.today.com/health/detroit-mom-jailed-refusing-court-order-vaccinate-child-t117126
  • John D. Grabenstein, "Should Vaccines Require a Prescription?," 32 Annals of Pharmacotherapy 495 (April 1998).
  • James G. Hodge, Lawrence O. Gostin, “School Vaccination Requirements : Historical, Social, and Legal Perspectives,” 90 Kentucky Law J. 831 (2002).
  • Bruce Hofkin, Living in a Microbial World 124 (2d ed. 2017).
  • Anna Kirkland, Vaccine Court: The Law and Politics of Injury (2016), p. 7.
  • Shobha S. Krishnan, The HPV Vaccine Controversy: Sex, Cancer, God, and Politics 7-8 (2008).
  • Andrew T. Kroger, William L. Atkinson and Larry K. Pickering, “General Immunization Practices,” in Stanley Plotkin, Ed., Plotkin's Vaccines 116 (7th ed. 2017)
  • Emily Marcus Levine, Andrea Sudell Davey, and Avril Melissa Houston, “Legal Issues,” in Stanley A. Plotkin, Ed., Plotkin's Vaccines, Seventh Ed. (2017), p. 1625
  • Kurt Link, The Vaccine Controversy: The History Use, and Safety of Vaccinations 3 (2005).
  • Adel Mahmoud, “A Global Roadmap is Needed for Vaccine Research, Development, and Deployment”
  • Kevin M. Malone. Alan R. Hinman, “The public health imperative and individual rights,” in R. A. Goodman, et al., eds., Law in Public Health Practice 45 (2d ed., 2007).
  • Donald G. McNeil Jr., Vaccine Makers Ranked on Pricing and Research, N.Y. Times (March 13, 2017), available at https://www.nytimes.com/2017/03/13/health/vaccine-makers-ranked-on-pricing-and-research.html.
  • Geoffrey S. Nelson, “Mormons and Compulsory Vaccination,” Mormon Press (March 30, 2015), available at http://www.mormonpress.com/mormon_vaccination.
  • Allison Noesekabel and Ada M. Fenick, Immunization requirements of the top 200 universities: Implications for vaccine-hesitant families, 35 Vaccine 3661065 (June 22, 2017).
  • Paul A. Offit and Frank DeStefano, “Vaccine Safety Controversies and Misconceptions,” in Stanley Plotkin, Ed., Plotkin's Vaccines (7th ed. 2017)
  • Stanley Plotkin, James M. Robinson, Gerard Cunningham, Robyn Iqbal, and Shannon Larsen, The complexity and cost of vaccine manufacturing – An overview, 35 Vaccine 4064–4071 (July 24, 2017), available at https://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pmc/articles/PMC5518734/.
  • Susan L. Plotkin and Stanley A. Plotkin, “A Short History of Vaccination,” in Stanley A. Plotkin, Ed., Plotkin's Vaccines 1 (7th ed. 2017).
  • Gregory A. Poland, Inna G. Ovsyannikova, and Robert M Jacobson, “Personalized vaccines: the emerging field of vaccinomics,” 8 Expert Opinion on Biological Therapy 1659 (Nov. 2008).
  • David B. Rein, Amanda A. Honeycutt, Lucia Rojas-Smith, and James C. Hersey, Impact of the CDC’s Section 317 Immunization Grants Program Funding on Childhood Vaccination Coverage, 96 American J. Public Health 1548–1553 (Sept. 2006), available at https://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pmc/articles/PMC3222325/.
  • Edward P. Richards, III, The United States Smallpox Bioterrorism Preparedness Plan: Rational Response or Potemkin Planning?, 36 Wm. Mitchell L. Rev. 5179, 5181-82 (2010)
  • Lance E. Rodewald, Walter A. Orenstein, Alan R. Hinman, and Anne Schuchat, Immunization in the United States, in Jason L. Schwartz and Arthur L. Kaplan, eds., Vaccination Ethics and Policy: An Introduction With Readings (2017), p. 127.
  • William L. Roper and Glen P. Mays, “The Federal Contribution to Public Health,” in F. Douglas Scutchfield and ‎C. William Keck, eds., Principles of Public Health Practice 83 (2003).
  • Elisabeth Rosenthal, “The Price of Prevention: Vaccine Costs Are Soaring,” The New York Times (July 2, 2014).
  • Jason L. Schwartz and Arthur L. Kaplan, eds., Vaccination Ethics and Policy: An Introduction With Readings (2017), p. 5.
  • Clare Anne Siegrist, “Vaccine Immunology,” in Stanley A. Plotkin, Ed., Plotkin's Vaccines 16 (7th ed. 2017).
  • Arthur M. Silverstein, A History of Immunology 2 (2012).
  • Philip J. Smith, David Wood, and Paul M. Darden, “Highlights of Historical Events Leading to National Surveillance of Vaccination Coverage in the United States,” 126 Pub. Health Rep. 3 (2011)
  • Mary Louise Turgeon, Immunology & Serology in Laboratory Medicine, Fifth Edition 209 (2013).
  • Erin Walkinshaw, Mandatory vaccinations: The international landscape, 183 Canadian Med. Assoc. J. 1167 (Nov. 8, 2011).
  • Krystalyn K. Weaver, Pharmacist-administered immunizations: What does your state allow?, Pharmacy Today 62-63 (October 2015), available at http://www.pharmacytoday.org/article/S1042-0991(15)30130-4/pdf.
  • David J. Weber and William A. Rutala, “Vaccines for Healthcare Personnel in Plotkin,” in Plotkin’s Vaccines 1411 (7th Ed.2017).
  • Michael Willrich, “The Least Vaccinated of Any Civilized Country": Personal Liberty and Public Health in the Progressive Era
  • Annette Wojciechowski, “Trading one epidemic for another: child immunization waivers and the fight against evading stricter waiver requirements,” 23 Annal Health L Adv Direct 63 (2014).
  • Sharon Xavioer and Jeff Goad, “Authority and Scope of Vaccination: How States Differ,” Pharmacy Times (June 22, 2017), available at http://www.pharmacytimes.com/publications/issue/2017/immunizationsupplementjune2017/authority-and-scope-of-vaccination-how-states-differ, accessed January 19, 2018.
  • Manon R Haverkate, et al., Mandatory and recommended vaccination in the EU, Iceland and Norway: results of the VENICE 2010 survey on the ways of implementing national vaccination programmes, 17 Eurosurveillance (May 31, 2012), available at http://eurosurveillance.org/content/10.2807/ese.17.22.20183-en; Josh Lowe, “Child Health: Vaccinations For 11 Diseases Mandatory in France Starting in 2018,” Newsweek (July 5, 2017), available at http://www.newsweek.com/france-vaccinations-compulsory-632060
  • Katie Forster, “France to make vaccination mandatory from 2018 as it is 'unacceptable children are still dying of measles,'” The Independent (July 5, 2017), available at http://www.independent.co.uk/news/world/europe/france-vaccination-mandatory-2018-next-year-children-health-measles-dying-anti-vaxxers-edouard-a7824246.html.
  • Susan Scutti, “How Countries Around the World Try to Encourage Vaccination,” CNN (Jan. 2, 2018).
  • Michael Klapdor and Alex Grove, “‘No Jab No Pay’ and other immunisation measures,” Parliament of Austrailia (May 2015), available at https://www.aph.gov.au/About_Parliament/Parliamentary_Departments/Parliamentary_Library/pubs/rp/BudgetReview201516/Vaccination
  • Nili Karako-Eyal, “Increasing Vaccination Rates Through Tort Law: Theoretical and Empirical Insights,” 86 UMKC L. Rev. 1 (2017); Brian Sullivan, “Those Who Refuse Vaccinations Can Cause Outbreaks: Should They Have to Pay for It?”, ABA J. (June 1, 2015), available at http://www.abajournal.com/magazine/article/those_who_refuse_the_needle_can_cause_outbreaks_should_they_have_to_pay_for/; Arthur L. Caplan et al., “Free to Choose but Liable for the Consequences: Should Non-Vaccinators be Penalized for the Harm They Do?”, 40 J. L. Med. & Ethics 606, 610 (2012)
  • Henry Belot, “Anti-vaccination advocate Kent Heckenlively denied entry to Australia by minister Peter Dutton,” ABC News (Aug. 30, 2017), available at http://www.abc.net.au/news/2017-08-31/anti-vaxxer-kent-heckenlively-denied-australian-visa/8859586
  • Hilary Whiteman and Reza Sayah, “Bin Laden raid harms Pakistan polio fight,” CNN (June 7, 2012), available at https://edition.cnn.com/2012/06/06/world/asia/pakistan-polio-vaccination/index.html
  • Sophia Saifi and Dankin And one, “Two polio workers killed in Pakistan,” CNN (March 18, 2018), available at https://edition.cnn.com/2018/03/18/world/polio-workers-killed-pakistan/index.html


Introduction/Overview of background science 1:40 to 6:20 = 4:40 2:55 to 11:55 = 9:00

Fed. Regulation 6:20 - 12:15 = ~6:00 11:55 - 22:40 = ~11:00

Who may administer 12:15 - 14:55 = 2:40 22:40 to 24:40 = 2:00

Intellectual Property (glossed over) 14:55 - 16:30 = 1:35 24:40 to 34:35 = ~10:00

Mandates generally 16:30 - 22:00 = 5:30 34:35-38:10 = 3:35

Mandates for children 22:00 - 26:00 = 4:00 54:00 - 62:30 = 8:30

Other vaccination mandates 26:00 - 29:50 = 3:50

Exemptions 29:50 - 40:50 = 11:00 40:00 - 50:00 = 10:00

Health care workers and private mandates 40:50 - 46:15 = 4:25 50:00 - 54:00 = 4:00

Adverse Event Reporting 46:15 - 49:30 = 3:15 62:30 - 67:45 = 5:15

Injury Compensation 49:30 - 59:00 = 9:30 67:45 - 74:00 = 6:15