3L Wins ABA Health Law Section Law Student Writing Competition
Seton Hall University School of Law student, Stephanie L. Flackman ’20 was selected
as the first place winner of the ABA Health Law Section Law Student Writing Competition. Flackman's paper, The Debilitating Disease of Chronic Pain and the Case for Mandated
Integration of Evidence-Based Alternatives into Individualized Treatment Plans, will be
published in The Health Lawyer. Her paper was selected first among submissions from
students at ABA-accredited law schools across the nation.
Flackman saw a need for a call to action. Her paper’s inspiration came from stories
of the lack of medical care, both prescription and physical therapy, were affecting
individuals living with chronic pain.
“I decided to write the paper in light of the opioid crisis in the United States and
the interrelation between opioid use and chronic pain,” explains Flackman. “The paper
calls for change in the legal framework surrounding the treatment of chronic pain
through the incorporation of a mandated evidence-based alternatives program that provides
patients with access to alternative treatment options they deserve.”
Guided by Professor Jennifer Oliva, Flackman was determined to clearly outline the
existing gap in current treatment guidelines focusing the paper on legal reform. She
recommends “the Department of Health and Human Services (“HHS”) condition state funding
for chronic pain, in connection with opioid-related funding, on state medical boards’
implementation of a mandated evidence-based alternative treatment plan in place of
opioid therapy (or, where medically necessary, in conjunction with prescription opioids)
to effectuate the goals medical guidelines already recommend.” Additionally, an emphasis
is placed that “federal law should require insurance companies to cover these evidence-based
alternatives eliminating the barriers of denial of coverage and visit limitations.”