CURRICULUM VITAE
E. Haavi Morreim August, 2007
Address: College of Medicine, Univ. of Tennessee 8343 Stavanger Cove
Dept. of Human Values and Ethics Cordova, TN 38018
956 Court, Box 11 (901) 755-7479
Memphis, TN 38163
(901) 448-5725; 901-448-1291 (fax)
Education:
1976-1980 Ph.D., University of Virginia, Charlottesville, VA; philosophy;
AoS: philosophy of law; dissertation: Freedom and Expression
1974-1976 M.A., University of Virginia, Charlottesville, VA; philosophy;
thesis: Moral Rights
1968-1972 B.A., St. Olaf College, Northfield, MN; philosophy
Academic Appointments:
1993- Professor, Department of Human Values and Ethics, College of
Medicine, University of Tennessee, Memphis, Tennessee.
1998- 2006 Professor (joint appointment), Division of Health Services and Policy Research, Department of Preventive Medicine, College of Medicine, University of Tennessee, Memphis
1988-1993 Associate Professor, Department of Human Values and Ethics, College of Medicine, University of Tennessee, Memphis, Tennessee.
1984-1988 Assistant Professor, Dept of Human Values & Ethics, College of Medicine,
University of Tennessee, Memphis
1982-1984 Assistant Professor of Philosophy in Medicine, School of Medicine,
University of Virginia, Charlottesville, VA.
1983 Andrew W. Mellon Visiting Assistant Professor of Humanities and
(Jan-May) Medicine, Georgetown University School of Medicine, and
Senior Visiting Research Scholar, Kennedy Institute of Ethics, Georgetown University; Washington, D.C.
1980-1982 Medical Philosopher, Program in Human Biology and Society; University
of Virginia School of Medicine; Charlottesville, VA.
1982 (Jan) Visiting Professor of Philosophy, St. Olaf College; Northfield, MN
1980 Adjunct Professor of Philosophy, Virginia Commonwealth University;
(Sept-Dec) Richmond, VA.
PROFESSIONAL MEMBERSHIPS:
Member, Clinical Leadership Council, SharedHealth (2007 - )
Chair, Independent Patient Advocacy Council, AbioCor Artificial Heart Trials
(2001 -2005)
American Society for Bioethics and Humanities (ASBH)
Society for Bioethics Consultation; elected, Board of Directors (1993-1996)
Society for Health and Human Values; elected, Executive Council (1992-1995)
(SBC and SHHV consolidated into ASBH, 1997)
American Society of Law, Medicine & Ethics
Hastings Center
American Health Lawyers Association
Senior Fellow for the Texas Public Policy Foundation
COMMITTEES:
Committee on Infection Control, University of Tennessee, Memphis
Dean's Faculty Advisory Committee, College of Medicine; 1994-present
Legal Medicine, Ethics and Healthcare Policy Committee, Department of Internal Medicine, University of Tennessee College of Medicine
Ethics Committee, LeBonheur Children's Medical Center
Ethics Committee, Regional Medical Center at Memphis
DSMBs (various)
Board of Editors, IRB: Ethics and Human Research, 2000-
Board of Editors, Journal of Law, Medicine & Ethics
Board of Editors, Accountability in Research, 2005-
Board of Editors, Organizational Ethics: Healthcare, Business, and Policy 2004-
Board of Editors, Journal of Medicine and Philosophy, 1992-1998
Editorial Advisory Board, Journal of Medicine and Philosophy, 1998-present
Editorial Advisory Board, Theoretical Medicine, 1987-1997
Editorial Advisory Board, Philosophy & Medicine series, Kluwer, 1990-2000
Institutional Review Board, University of Tennessee, Memphis; 1989-1999
Manuscript reviewer:
Journal of the American Medical Association, Annals of Internal Medicine, Annals of Thoracic Surgery, Journal of Law, Medicine & Ethics, Journal of Clinical Ethics, Hastings Center Report, Journal of Health Politics, Policy and Law, Radiology, Harvard University Press, Oxford University Press
Policy reviewer, American College of Physicians-ASIM
HONORS:
Listed: Policy Experts: Guide to Public Policy Experts (Heritage Foundation) (since 2000); Marquis: Who's Who in America; Who's Who of American Women; Who's Who in Medicine and Health Care; Who's Who in the South and Southwest; Who's Who in American Education.
Visiting Scholar, University of Texas Medical Branch, Institute for Medical Humanities, 2002
Health Services Research Fellow, UT Center for Health Services Research, inducted 2004
Residents' Special Recognition Award, University of Tennessee Department of Pediatrics, 2001
Raven Society, University of Virginia, 1979
Phi Beta Kappa, 1971
PUBLICATIONS: Books:
Morreim EH. Holding Health Care Accountable: Law and the New Medical Marketplace. New York: Oxford University Press, 2001.
Morreim EH. Balancing Act: The New Medical Ethics of Medicine's New Economics. Dordrecht: Kluwer Academic Publishers, 1991.
Republished in paperback, Georgetown University Press, 1995.
PUBLICATIONS: Chapters of Books:
Morreim EH. A matter of obligation: Physicians versus clinical investigators. Cherry MJ, Iltis A, eds. Bioethics: Pluralistic Casuistry. Dordrecht: Kluwer Academic Publishers; forthcoming, 2007
Morreim EH. Ties without tethers: Bioethics-corporate relations in the AbioCor artificial heart trial. Cohn F, Eckenwiler LA, ets. The Ethics of Bioethics: Examining the Moral Landscape. Baltimore: Johns Hopkins University Press, 2007; 181-190.
Morreim EH. Medical errors: Pinning the blame versus blaming the system. In: Accountability: Patient Safety and Policy Reform. Sharpe VA, ed. Washington DC: Georgetown University Press, 2004; 213-232.
Morreim EH. Conflict of interest. In: Encyclopedia of Bioethics, 3rd edition, Stephen G. Post, ed. New York: Macmillan Reference USA; 2004; 503-508
Morreim EH. Quality of life in health care allocation. In: Encyclopedia of Bioethics, 3rd edition, Stephen G. Post, ed. New York: Macmillan Reference USA; 2004; 1394-1397
Morreim EH. Back to the future: from managed care to patient-managed care. In: The Ethics of Managed Care: Professional Integrity and Patient Rights. Bondeson WB, Jones JW, editors. Dordrecht: Kluwer Academic Publishers, 2002; 139-162.
Morreim EH. Alternative health care: limits of science and boundaries of access. In: Health Care and Social Justice. Rhodes R, Silver A, Battin, MA, editors. New York: Oxford University Press, 2002; 319-344.
Morreim EH. Sticks and carrots and baseball bats: economic and other incentives to modify health behavior. In: Managing Health Behavior: Ethical Dilemmas in Health Promotion and Disease Prevention. Daniel Callahan, editor; Georgetown: Georgetown University Press; 2000; 56-75.
Morreim EH. Saving lives, spending money: shepherding the role of technology. In: Ethical Issues in Health Care on the Frontiers of the Twenty-First Century. Wear S, Bono JJ, Logue G, McEvoy A, editors; Philosophy and Medicine Series; Dordrecht: Kluwer Academic Publishers, 2000; 65-112.
Morreim EH. Coverage of emergency services. In: Ethical Challenges in Managed Care: A Casebook. Gervais KG, Priester R, Vawter DE, Otte KK, Solberg MM, eds. Washington, DC: Georgetown University Press, 1999; 36-41.
Morreim EH. At the intersection of medicine, law, economics, and ethics: the art of intellectual cross-dressing. In: Perspectives on Philosophy in Medicine. Philosophy and Medicine Series, vol. 50; Carson RA, Burns CR, eds. Dordrecht: Kluwer Academic Publishers, 1997; 299-325.
Morreim EH. Medicine's monopoly: from trust-busting to trust. In: Reading Engelhardt, B Minogue, G Palmer-Fernandez, and JE Reagan eds. Dordrecht: Kluwer Academic Publishers, 1997, pp. 45-75.
Morreim EH. Conflicts of interest for physician entrepreneurs. In: Conflicts of Interest in Clinical Practice and Research, edited by David S. Shimm, Roy G. Spece, and Alan Buchanan; London: Oxford University Press, 1996, pp. 251-285.
Morreim EH. Conflict of interest. In: Encyclopedia of Bioethics, 2nd edition, edited by Warren Thomas Reich; New York: Simon & Schuster MacMillan, 1995; Volume 1, 459-465.
Morreim EH. Quality of life in health care allocation. In: Encyclopedia of Bioethics, 2nd edition, edited by Warren Thomas Reich; New York: Simon & Schuster MacMillan, 1995; Volume 3, 1358-1361.
Morreim EH. Ethical issues in scope of practice. In: Proceedings of the Orthodontic Educational Development Symposium, edited by W.E. Roberts, R.A. White, W.C. McGaghie. St. Louis: American Association of Orthodontists, 1994, 104-112.
Morreim EH. Rationing and the law. In: Rationing America's Medical Care: The Oregon Plan and Beyond. M.A. Strosberg, J.M. Wiener, R. Baker, and I.A. Fein, eds. Washington, D.C.: Brookings Institution, 1992, 159-184.
Morreim EH. Competence: At the intersection of law. Medicine and Philosophy. In: Competency: A study of informal competency determinations in primary care. Cutter MAG, Shelp E, eds. Dordrecht: Kluwer Academic Publishers, 1991: 93-125.
Morreim EH. The very low birth weight fetus: Ethical considerations in obstetric management. In: etal Diagnosis and Therapy: Science, Ethics, and Law. Evans M, Fletcher J, Dixler A, Schulman J, eds. FPhiladelphia: J.B. Lippincott Co, 1989: 233-242.
Morreim EH. Computing the quality of life. In: The price of health: Cost benefit analysis in medicine. Agich G, Begley C. Dordrecht: D. Reidel Pub. Co, 1986: 45-69.
PUBLICATIONS: Journal Articles:
Morreim EH. Consumer-defined health plans: Emerging challenges from tort and contract. Journal of Health Law 2006; 39(3): 307-348.
Morreim EH. When research ethics meets business ethics: the AbioCor artificial heart trial. Organizational Ethics: Healthcare, Business, and Policy 2006; 3(1): 40-45.
Morreim EH, Mack MJ, Sade RM. Surgical innovation: Too risky to remain unregulated? Annals of Thoracic Surgery 2006; 82: 1958-1961.
Morreim EH, Webb GE, Gordon HL et al. Innovation in human research protection: The AbioCor artificial heart trial. The American Journal of Bioethics 2006; 6(5): W6-W16.
Morreim EH. High-deductible health plans: New twists on old challenges from tort and contract. Vanderbilt Law Review 2006; 59: 1207-1261.
Morreim EH. End-stage heart disease, high-risk research, and competence to consent: the case of the AbioCor artificial heart. Perspectives in Biology and Medicine 2006; 49(1): 19-34.
Morreim EH. The clinical investigator as fiduciary: Discarding a misguided idea. Journal of Law, Medicine & Ethics 2005; 33(3): 586-598.
Morreim EH. Surgically implanted devices: Ethical challenges in a very different kind of research. Thoracic Surgery Clinics 2005; 15(4): 555-563.
Morreim EH. Civil disobedience: the devil is in the details (letter). Hastings Center Report 2005; 35(4): 4.
Morreim EH. Another kind of end-run: Status upgrades. American Journal of Bioethics 2005; 5(4): 11-12.
Morreim EH. Cardiovascular research and subject advocates. Law and Bioethics Report 2005; 4(3): 4-5.
Morreim EH. Research versus innovation: Real differences. American Journal of Bioethics 2005; 5(1): 42-43.
Morreim EH. Clinical trials litigation: practical realities as seen from the trenches. Accountability in Research 2005; 12(1): 47-64.
Morreim EH. Beyond the lies: Solving the problem. American Journal of Bioethics 2004; 4(4): 61-63.
Morreim EH. About face: Downplaying the role of the press in facial transplantation research. American Journal of Bioethics; 2004; 4(3): 27-29.
Morreim EH. By any other name: the many iterations of 'patient advocate' in clinical research. IRB: Ethics & Human Research 2004; 26(6): 1-8.
Morreim EH. Litigation in clinical research: Malpractice doctrines versus research realities. Journal of Law, Medicine and Ethics; 2004; 32(3): 474-484.
Morreim EH. High-profile research and the media: the case of the AbioCor artificial heart. Hastings Center Report; 2004: 34(1): 11-24.
Morreim EH. Medical research litigation and malpractice tort doctrines: courts on a learning curve. Houston Journal of Health Law and Policy; 2003; 4(1); 1-86.
Excerpts to be reprinted in: Coleman CH, Dubler NN, Goldner JA, Menikoff JA, eds. The Ethics and Regulation of Research with Human Subjects. Newark: LexisNexis Matthew Bender & Co., Inc.; 2005 (forthcoming).
Morreim EH. Clinical Trials Litigation: Courts in Confusion. Medical Research Law & Policy (BNA) December 17, 2003; 2(24): 908-910
Morreim EH. ERISA Takes a Drubbing: Rush Prudential and its Implications for Health Care. Tort & Insurance Law Journal 2003; 38(3): 933-961.
Morreim EH. A dose of our own medicine: CAM, conventional medicine, and the standards of science. Journal of Law, Medicine & Ethics 2003; 31(2): 222-235.
Morreim EH. Supreme Court rejects preemption in ERISA benefits dispute. Hospital News Letter 2002; 20(1): 1-5.
Morreim EH. Battling for Control of Healthcare Resources. The Independent Review 2002; 7(2): 237-252.
Morreim EH. Defined contribution: from managed care to patient-managed care. Cato Journal 2002; 22(1): 103-120.
Morreim EH. Professionalism and clinical autonomy in the practice of medicine. Mt. Sinai Journal of Medicine 2002; 69(6): 370-77.
Lamm RD, Morreim EH. Health care: A Faustian bargain. Society 2002 (May/June); 39(4): 33-38.
Morreim EH. Innovation in human research protection: the Independent Patient Advocacy Council. Law and Bioethics Report 2001; 1: 3-5.
Morreim EH. Another ERISA twist: the mysterious case of Pegram and the missing fiduciary. University of Pittsburgh Law Review 2002; 63(2): 235-292.
Morreim EH. Result-based compensation in health care: a good, but limited, idea. Journal of Law, Medicine & Ethics 2001; 29(2): 174-181.
Morreim EH. The futility of "medical necessity." Regulation 2001; 24(2): 22-26.
Reprinted as: Let contracts, not 'necessity,' guide health system. Consumers' Research 2001; 84(12): 18-22
Morreim EH. From the clinics to the courts: the role evidence should play in litigating the standard of care. Journal of Health Politics, Policy and Law 2001; 26(2): 409-427.
Morreim EH. Quality of life: erosions and opportunities under managed care. Journal of Law, Medicine & Ethics 2000; 28: 144-158.
Morreim EH. Confusion in the courts: managed care financial structures and their impact on medical care. Tort & Insurance Law Journal 2000; 35(3): 699-728.
to be reprinted in: Encyclopedia of Health Law & Ethics
Morreim EH. The ethical and legal imperatives of medical errors. Healthcare Executive 2000; 15(4): 56-57.
reprinted in: Hofman PB, Nelaon WA, eds. Managing Ethically: An Executive's Guide. Chicago: Health Administration Press, 2001; 141-144.
Morreim EH. Playing doctor: corporate medical practice and medical malpractice. Michigan Journal of Law Reform 1999; 32(4): 939-1040.
to be reprinted in: Shepherd L, Dolgin J. Bioethics and the Law. Cambridge: Aspen Publishers, 2005.
Morreim EH. Beyond the fee-for-service/managed care dichotomy (review of: Wong K. Medicine and the Marketplace). Medical Humanities Review, 2000; 14(1): 42-48.
Morreim EH. Ethical issues in care management: case studies in moral problem-solving. Geriatric Care Management Journal 1999; 9(4): 8-15.
Morreim EH. Assessing quality of care: new twists from managed care. Journal of Clinical Ethics 1999; 10(2): 88-99.
Morreim EH. Bioethics and the press. Journal of Medicine and Philosophy 1999; 24(2): 103-107.
Morreim EH. Organizational ethics: physician compensation in managed care (case commentary). Lahey Clinic Medical Ethics Newsletter Winter 1999: p.3.
Morreim EH. Revenue streams and clinical discretion. Journal of the American Geriatrics Society 1998; 46(3): 331-337.
to be reprinted in: DeGrazia D, Mappes TA. Biomedical Ethics, 5th ed. New York: McGraw-Hill, 2001
Morreim EH. Benefits decisions in ERISA plans: diminishing deference to fiduciaries, and an emerging problem for PSOs. Tennessee Law Review 1998; 65(2): 511-553.
excerpts to be reprinted in: Alan Lieberson, ed. Healthcare Enterprise Liability (supplement). Charlottesville: Lexis Law Publishers, 1997 (supplement: 1999)
Morreim EH. Medicine meets resource limits: Restructuring the legal standard of care. University of Pittsburgh Law Review 1997; 59(1): 1-95.
Morreim EH. The semantics and concepts underlying physician-assisted dying (symposium panel). Cornell Journal of Law and Public Policy. Winter, 1998; 7(2): 294-326.
Morreim EH. Case study analysis on gaming payers' reimbursement rules. In: Mandated use of PA in surgery raises two concerns. Amer Med News 2/23/98, p. 47.
Morreim EH. Bioethics, expertise, and the courts. Journal of Medicine and Philosophy 1997; 22(4): 291-295.
Mirvis DM, Chang C, Morreim EH. Protecting older people while managing their care (editorial); Journal of the American Geriatrics Society 1997; 45(5): 645-646.
Morreim EH. Managed care, ethics, and academic health centers: Maximizing potential, minimizing drawbacks. Academic Medicine 1997; 72(5): pp. 332-340.