yalealumnimagazine.com  
  1891  
spacer spacer spacer
 
rule
 
yalealumnimagazine.com
About Us
Change of Address
Advertising
The Yale Classifieds
Subscriptions
Letter to the Editor

spacer
 
current issue

current issue
issue archives

 

advertise demographics
request a media kit
view The Yale Classifieds
place a classified ad

 
 
 
 

Comment on this article

Inside the Blue Book
Building a Bioethical Bridge

CSSY 330b
Landmark Legal Cases in Bioethics
Faculty: Kenneth F. Baum ’01JD, ’01MD, Attorney, Lecturer in Yale College

One of the most stimulating aspects of medical school, for Kenneth Baum, was talking about bioethics and health law.By enrolling simultaneously at the Law School, Baum says he "had the opportunity to make a medical-legal niche at Yale." An early step involved creating the Yale Health and Law Society.

Now, in addition to working at Wiggin & Dana as a litigator who specializes in medical malpractice defense, Baum continues to bridge the disciplines with a residential college seminar called "Landmark Legal Cases in Bioethics." His 18 students represent such interests as premed, law, history, and theology. "Bioethics needs multiple perspectives if you want to get something out of it," he says. The class has had fiery debates over such socially contentious issues and cases as abortion (Roe v. Wade) and euthanasia (People v. Kevorkian).

 

“It’s human nature to want to blame someone.”

Confronting issues of medical care in a critical way—from both legal and medical perspectives—can be beneficial. "In medicine, things are very often black and white; you rely heavily on tests and lab values," Baum says. "Law can shed light on all the shades of gray.”

By getting future doctors and lawyers in a classroom together, Baum hopes to bridge the gap (earlier rather than later) between two professions that, historically, have had a strained relationship. He tells the students who are going to become doctors that chances are they will have a malpractice suit filed against them at some point. “It’s human nature to want to blame someone,” Baum says. “I’m letting them know what to expect when it’s their turn.”  the end

 
     
  spacer   spacer
 
 
 
rule
spacer
 

©1992–2012, Yale Alumni Publications, Inc. All rights reserved.

Yale Alumni Magazine, P.O. Box 1905, New Haven, CT 06509-1905, USA. yam@yale.edu