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johnsosh@slu.edu
3700 Lindell Blvd.
St. Louis, MO 63108
General Inquiries:
314.977.2766
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EDUCATION
Saint Louis University, A.B. 1973
summa cum laude, Phi Beta Kappa;
New York University School of Law,
J.D. 1976, Root-Tilden Scholar,
Junior Fellow, Center for International
Studies; Yale Law School, LL.M. 1977,
Yale Law Fellow.
Scholarship Focuses on Health Law,
Particularly the Areas of Bioethics, Pain
Management and Long-Term Care.
Director, Mayday Fund Pain Relief
Project, American Society of Law,
Medicine & Ethics; Holder, Tenet
Endowed Chair in Health Law and
Ethics; Past President, American
Society of Law, Medicine & Ethics;
Fellow, The Hastings Center; Editorial
Board, Journal of Law, Medicine &
Ethics.
Recipient, Pellegrino Medal, HEAL
Institute, Samford University 2003;
Woman of the Year Award, Women’s
Justice Awards, St. Louis Daily Record
2002; William J. Curran Distinguished
Public Health Service Award,
2001; Woman of the Year, Saint
Louis University 1997; Outstanding
Achievement Award, American Society
of Law, Medicine & Ethics 1997;
Distinguished Health Law Teacher
Award, American Society of Law &
Medicine 1991.
AREAS OF EXPERTISE
Bioethics
Elder Law
Health Law
Property
COURSES
Property
Health Care Law
Bioethics
Health Law special topics
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Sandra H. Johnson
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Professor of Law Tenet Endowed Chair in Health Law and Ethics
Sandra Johnson’s scholarship has helped form the field of health law.
The casebook she co-authored in 1987, Health Law — Cases, Materials
and Problems, was the first to use the title of “health law.” Now in its
5th edition, the book has been used in more than 150 universities in the
United States and has been cited more than 500 times in scholarly articles
and court opinions. Johnson is also co-author of the treatise, Health Law,
which the U.S. Supreme Court has cited three times — a rarity for such
publications.
Professor Johnson’s research interests include long-term health care,
medical licensure and bioethics. A prolific writer, her work has been
published in prestigious journals, including the Journal of the American
Medical Association. For the past seven years she has been exploring
regulatory issues in pain management.
“When you explore the reasons why doctors and nurses undertreat pain,
some of them have to do with legal constraints,” says Johnson. “They’re
afraid if they prescribe opioids for non-terminal, non-cancer pain
patients they could lose their licenses, and their fears sometimes are well
founded. Our studies showed that some state medical boards evaluated
and disciplined doctors based on how much they prescribed and how
long they prescribed for a particular patient. That’s inappropriate for
chronic pain management. Patients need the medication for as long as
they need it.”
In collaboration with other scholars at the American Society of Law,
Medicine & Ethics, Professor Johnson helped draft the Model Pain Relief
Act that has been adopted by some state legislatures and consulted with
the Federation of State Medical Boards in developing standards that are
being used by many state medical boards. She also helped develop the
Mayday Scholars Program, which encourages legal scholars to turn their
talent and time toward the issue of improving pain management. Her next
project is evaluating pain management in emergency medicine.
Professor Johnson was an assistant law professor at New York Law
School before joining Saint Louis University in 1978. In 1982, she
became founding director of the Center for Health Law Studies, now
recognized as one of the top health law centers in the country. She served
as interim dean of the law school from 1991-92 and was provost of Saint
Louis University from 1998-2002 before resuming teaching full time.
She holds the Tenet Endowed Chair in Health Law and Ethics at Saint
Louis University Center for Health Care Ethics. She also has secondary
teaching appointments in the School of Medicine and School of Public
Health. “Health law is defined by context,” says Johnson. “Some of the
issues we encounter are beyond our skills as lawyers and I believe it’s
critical to develop interdisciplinary expertise if we’re to improve health
care.”
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