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McDonald-Merrill-Ketcham Award Lecture Friday, March 3, 2017 2.0 hours of Indiana CLE credit (pending approval) Dayna Matthew, J.D. Professor of Law and Director, Health Law & Policy Program, University of Colorado School of Law Lawrence W. Inlow Hall 530 West New York Street Indianapolis, IN 46202 Just Medicine is Good Medicine: Data Driven Solutions to Health Inequity Friday, March 3, 2017 2.0 hours of Indiana CLE credit (pending approval) Dayna Matthew, J.D. Professor of Law and Director, Health Law & Policy Program, University of Colorado School of Law THE WILLIAM S. AND CHRISTINE S. HALL Center for Law and Health Just Medicine is Good Medicine: Data Driven Solutions to Health Inequity THE WILLIAM S. AND CHRISTINE S. HALL Center for Law and Health Register online: mckinneylaw.iu.edu Questions? Contact the Hall Center at [email protected]

Questions? [email protected] Just Medicine is Good

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Page 1: Questions? centerlh@iupui.edu Just Medicine is Good

McDonald-Merrill-Ketcham Award Lecture

Friday, March 3, 20172.0 hours of Indiana CLE credit (pending approval)

Dayna Matthew, J.D.Professor of Law and Director, Health Law & Policy Program, University of Colorado School of Law

Lawrence W. Inlow Hall530 West New York StreetIndianapolis, IN 46202

Just Medicine is Good Medicine:Data Driven Solutions to Health Inequity

Friday, March 3, 20172.0 hours of Indiana CLE credit (pending approval)

Dayna Matthew, J.D.Professor of Law and Director, Health Law & Policy Program, University of Colorado School of Law

THE WILLIAM S. AND CHRISTINE S. HALL

Center for Law and Health

Just Medicine is Good Medicine:Data Driven Solutions to Health Inequity

THE WILLIAM S. AND CHRISTINE S. HALL

Center for Law and Health

Register online: mckinneylaw.iu.eduQuestions? Contact the Hall Center at [email protected]

Page 2: Questions? centerlh@iupui.edu Just Medicine is Good

McDonald-Merrill-Ketcham Award LectureVisionary alumna Dorothy M. Ketcham (B.A. in Economics in 1914 and M.A. in Sociology in 1915) was a faculty member at the University of Michigan whose work showed her the important role that medicine and law played in the lives of those whom she served at the UM Hospital. She established a multifaceted workshop and recreational facility for children confined to the hospital and wrote several books, two of which were devoted to hospital law.

Ketcham’s affinity for the law grew out of her family’s close relationship with the legal system. Her grandfather, David McDonald, was a United States District Court judge and her father, William A. Ketcham, was a well-known Indianapolis attorney who was elected to the office of state attorney general for two terms.

Dorothy Ketcham’s interest in health law prompted her to establish a trust which resulted in a fund for Indiana University to develop programs fostering greater understanding between the professions of law and medicine. Ketcham’s generous gift, named for her grandparents (Judge David McDonald, John L. Ketcham and Jane Merrill Ketcham), funds this prestigious lectureship and award for an individual who has demonstrated excellence in the fields of common interest to the two professions.

William S. and Christine S. Hall Center for Law and HealthAt the Hall Center for Law and Health we are passionate about health care law and policy, and we have been helping students, faculty and practitioners with a similar passion for over 25 years through research, scholarship, and experiential learning opportunities. The Center is located on the campus of Indiana University Purdue University Indianapolis, the same IU campus that is home to the nation’s second largest medical school, the nation’s largest multi-disciplinary nursing school, the top-ranked Richard M. Fairbanks School of Public Health, and the internationally-recognized Center for Bioethics.

Just Medicine is Good Medicine: Data Driven Solutions to Health Inequity

Friday, March 3, 2017Light Lunch: 11:30 a.m., Atrium

Award Lecture: 12:00 – 1:00 p.m.Wynne Courtroom (Room 100)

Dayna Matthew, J.D., Professor of Law and Director, Health Law & Policy Program, University of Colorado School of Law

Panel Discussion: 1:00 – 2:00 p.m.Wynne Courtroom (Room 100)

Jerome M. Adams, M.D., M.P.H., Commissioner, Indiana State Department of Health; Assistant Professor of Clinical Anesthesia, Indiana University School of Medicine; Anesthesiologist, Eskenazi Health

Mary G. Austrom, Ph.D., Professor of Clinical Psychology in Clinical Psychiatry and Wesley P. Martin Professor of Alzheimer Disease Education, Indiana University School of Medicine; Associate Dean of Diversity Affairs, Indiana University School of Medicine

Heather McCabe, ’03, J.D., M.S.W., Assistant Professor of Social Work, Indiana University School of Social Work; Adjunct Professor, Indiana University Robert H. McKinney School of Law

Dayna Matthew, J.D., is a Professor of Law and the Director of the Health Law & Policy Program at the University of Colorado School of Law. She brings an interdisciplinary approach to the study of health law. In addition to her appointment at the University of Colorado School of Law, where she teaches courses in Constitutional Law, Civil Procedure, Evidence and a variety of health law courses, she holds a joint appointment at the Colorado School of Public Health and offers classes in which law and public health students study, provide direct client representation, and advocate for changes in public health law and policy together. Professor Matthew is

co-founder of the Colorado Health Equity Project, a medical legal partnership whose mission is to remove barriers to good health for low income clients by providing legal representation, research, and policy advocacy. She also serves as a member of the Center for Bioethics and Humanities and the Eugene Farley Center for Health Policy at the University of Colorado School of Medicine.

Professor Matthew is an accomplished scholar who has written articles on health and antitrust law topics which have appeared in various law journals, including the Virginia Law Review, Georgetown Journal of Law and Modern Critical Race Perspectives, Michigan Journal of Law Reform, Houston Law Review, Wake Forest Law Review, Indiana Law Journal, Kentucky Law Journal, St. Louis University Law Journal, as well as the American Journal of Law and Medicine. She recently published Just Medicine: A Cure for Racial Inequality in American Health Care (NYU Press, 2015).

Professor Matthew is an active contributor to health policy discourse as a Non-Resident Scholar at the Brookings Institution and as a Visiting Fellow at the Congressional Black Caucus Foundation. Matthew has recently completed several noteworthy public service experiences in Washington, D.C. She served as a Senior Advisor to the Director of the Environmental Protection Agency’s Office of Civil Rights in 2015, and she worked on the health policy team for Senator Debbie Stabenow as a Robert Wood Johnson Health Policy Fellow in 2016.

She has received numerous awards for her commitment to scholarship and public service, including Colorado University School of Law’s Clifford Calhoun Faculty Award for Public Service (May 2015) and the Margaret Willard Award (2015, presented by the University Women’s Club of Boulder). She was recently named as one of the Top 25 Most Powerful Women (2016) by the Colorado Women’s Chamber of Commerce.

Professor Matthew graduated with an A.B. in Economics from Harvard-Radcliffe and, after a brief stint as a commercial real estate banker, obtained a J.D. from the University of Virginia. While studying at Virginia, Professor Matthew served as an editor of the Virginia Law Review, won the Law School’s two year Lile Moot Court Competition, and taught as a Hardy Dillard Writing Fellow. Following graduation, she enjoyed the privilege of clerking for The Honorable John Charles Thomas, the first African-American justice to sit on the Virginia Supreme Court.

After completing this clerkship, Matthew practiced as a civil litigator both in Kentucky, at the law firm of Greenebaum, Doll and McDonald, and in Virginia, at McGuire Woods where her work primarily focused on the defense of medical care providers and corporate manufacturers in state courts, Federal Courts, and before administrative and licensing tribunals. She has been a faculty member at the University of Virginia School of Law, the University of Louisville School of Law, and the University of Kentucky College of Law.

Professor Matthew continues to expand her expertise as a scholar of health law, public health, bioethics, and humanities as a Ph.D. candidate in Health and Behavioral Sciences at the University of Colorado.