LLM Healthcare Ethics and Law

Year of entry: 2024

Course unit details:
Global Health Law and Bioethics

Course unit fact file
Unit code CSEP60222
Credit rating 15
Unit level FHEQ level 7 – master's degree or fourth year of an integrated master's degree
Teaching period(s) Semester 2
Available as a free choice unit? Yes

Overview

 

This course integrates discussion of law and ethics in a global context. This course examines a number of key topics including:

National Cultures and Health Law

Global Ethics and Challenges to Western Principlism

Public Health Ethics in an International Context

Locating Health in International Law

 Healthcare Tourism

Live organ donation

This course is delivered by both health law and bioethics staff. This course seeks to respond to current problems and thus the exact content of the course may vary from year to year in order to offer such a response and ensure each class is led by the most appropriate staff member. 

Aims

The aims of this course unit are:

To develop your understanding of health law and bioethics in a global context.

To enable you to critically analyse differing national responses to universal problems in the healthcare context and to consider the factors that contribute to these responses.

To develop your capacity for critical analysis and logical thinking and to encourage independent learning and commitment to scholarship.

To develop a range of transferable and generic skills in problem-solving and reasoning, computer literacy, time management and written communication.

 

Teaching and learning methods

Contact/Interaction Time: 20 hours (this includes at least nine two-hour sessions). 

The additional two hours will be made up either by another two-hour session or through clearly communicated office hours. 

 

This course unit comprises nine or ten two-hour sessions. The exact format may vary from year to year. Most sessions will involve a presentation by the lecturer together with the opportunity for the class to discuss case studies and other issues raised by the topic. Students may also be placed into small groups to work together on a case study to present to the class at a later session.

 

Additionally, the students will be expected to undertake private study, approximately as follows:

 

Preparation for classes: 30 - 50 hours
Research and directed reading: 60 hours
Preparation of assignments: 40 hours


Total time: 150 hours

Knowledge and understanding

Have developed a detailed and critical knowledge of how different states have responded to the same healthcare issues.

Have developed a greater understanding of bioethics internationally.

Have developed an understanding of existing regulations and conventions which operate across national boundaries.

Intellectual skills

Have enhanced your ability to reflect on and to critically analyse a range of issues, specifically in relation to the differing national responses to healthcare issues.

Have reflected on and critically analysed the extent to which, if at all, universal 'codes' are workable in this context.

Have enhanced your ability to undertake independent research using a variety of sources.

Have developed your ability to write critically and analytically on issues raised by the course.

Employability skills

Analytical skills
Oral communication
Problem solving
Written communication

Assessment methods

Method Weight
Written assignment (inc essay) 100%

Feedback methods

 

Assessment methods: One assessed essay of 4,000 words

Formative feedback within this course unit is provided in class discussions.

Feedback on assessed written work is provided through comprehensive written electronic feedback giving both broad indications and detailed comments on strengths, weaknesses and areas for improvement

Recommended reading

As for Philosophical Bioethics and Medico-Legal Problems; specific reading will be prescribed in advance of each  session.

 

Study hours

Scheduled activity hours
Lectures 50
Independent study hours
Independent study 100

Teaching staff

Staff member Role
Catherine Stanton Unit coordinator

Additional notes

Information
Formative feedback within this course unit is provided in class discussions.

Feedback on assessed written work is provided through comprehensive written electronic feedback giving both broad indications and detailed comments on strengths, weaknesses and areas for improvement.

This is an optional course unit for campus-based Health Care Ethics & Law programmes in Department  of Law.

Timetable
See CSEP timetable

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