If it quacks like a duck: reviewing health care providers' speech restrictions under the first prong of Central Hudson

The First Amendment protects the speech of health care providers. This protection can limit states' abilities to protect patients from harmful therapies involving speech, such as sexual orientation change efforts. Because providers' speech is more similar to commercial speech than traditio...

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Veröffentlicht in:The American University law review 2013, Vol.63 (2), p.567-606
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description The First Amendment protects the speech of health care providers. This protection can limit states' abilities to protect patients from harmful therapies involving speech, such as sexual orientation change efforts. Because providers' speech is more similar to commercial speech than traditional political discourse, it is possible to create a First Amendment review analysis that better balances states' police powers with providers' First Amendment rights. Under a "single-prong" approach, the first prong of Central Hudson can be used to identify quackery, which is analogous to false or misleading commercial speech and would therefore be outside the protection of the First Amendment. Because health care must be tailored to individual patients, restrictions on speech that survive the first prong of Central Hudson would be subject to strict scrutiny in order to leave the therapeutic decision to the provider and her patient, and maintain consistency with current jurisprudence. This Comment examines litigation from California's attempted ban on sexual orientation change therapy to illustrate the conflicts created by the current approach to First Amendment review of health care provider speech. This Comment then demonstrates the benefit of the proposed single-prong approach, including how it simultaneously protects patients from harm while protecting health care providers' speech.
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This Comment examines litigation from California's attempted ban on sexual orientation change therapy to illustrate the conflicts created by the current approach to First Amendment review of health care provider speech. This Comment then demonstrates the benefit of the proposed single-prong approach, including how it simultaneously protects patients from harm while protecting health care providers' speech.</abstract><cop>United States</cop><pub>American University Law Review</pub><pmid>25335201</pmid><tpages>40</tpages></addata></record>
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source MEDLINE; Elektronische Zeitschriftenbibliothek - Frei zugängliche E-Journals; HeinOnline Law Journal Library; Alma/SFX Local Collection
subjects Abortion, Legal - legislation & jurisprudence
California
Civil Rights - legislation & jurisprudence
Commerce - legislation & jurisprudence
Commercial speech
Federal court decisions
Female
Firearms - legislation & jurisprudence
First Amendment-US
Freedom of speech
Health care
Health care industry
Health Personnel - legislation & jurisprudence
Health technology assessment
Homosexuality - psychology
Humans
Injunctions
LGBTQ people
Licenses
Licensing
Litigation
Medical Marijuana
Medical personnel
Patients
Pregnancy
Professional standards
Professionals
Professions
Psychotherapy - legislation & jurisprudence
Psychotherapy - methods
Public health
Quackery - legislation & jurisprudence
Restrictions
Sanctions
Sexual orientation
Speech
State Government
Studies
United States
title If it quacks like a duck: reviewing health care providers' speech restrictions under the first prong of Central Hudson
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