Oliver was quoted in the Deseret News about a debate in the New Mexico legislature over using telehealth for end-of-life decision-making.
Read MoreOliver’s presentation at the Second International Conference on the End of Life in 2017 has been published in the Dalhousie Law Journal.
Read MoreReflecting on the recent rollout of the Australian “My Health Record” initiative, Oliver compared its bumpy roll-out paralleled the roll-out of the American healthcare.gov in a recent Grantwatch posting in Health Affairs.
Read MoreFollowing up from the panel presentation at Yale Law School, Oliver’s presentation was featured as part of a blog symposium on Balkinzation. His blog discusses two related issues: is technology widening health disparities, and is technology based on diverse data?
Read MoreOliver was a featured presenter on a panel, “Big Data in Health Care: Challenges, Biases, and Benefits,” at the Yale Symposium on the Law and Policy of AI, Robotics, and Telemedicine in Health Care.
Read MoreOliver co-wrote a white paper on children’s health needs in Michigan in conjunction with a consortium of stakeholders through a grant from the Michigan Health Endowment. This report is timely as the state legislature is considering an increased appropriation for children’s mental health services.
Read MoreOliver's new blog at Bill of Health, the health law blog for the Petrie Flom Center at Harvard Law School, highlights efforts to improve data collection on Asian Americans and Pacific Islanders as part of the annual Asian American Heritage Month. The blog touches on legal and policy concepts that Oliver will be presenting at Yale Law School as part of an upcoming conference.
Read MoreOliver’s latest blog discusses one part of the debate on drug prices: do Americans pay higher prices because of other countries’ drug pricing programs?
Read MoreOliver will be studying at a health law center in Australia through a grant from the Australian government. This grant will allow him to continue his work in global health law and health IT policy.
Read MoreOliver was selected to participate in a three-day program in Cleveland on addiction policy with a focus on the opioid epidemic. The program is part of the Alumni Thematic International Exchange Seminar (TIES) series, which bring together alums of State Department exchanges with an interest in a public policy issue.
Read MoreOliver presented on end-of-life issues at the 2018 Aging in American conference.
Read MoreOliver's new blog at Bill of Health, the health law blog for the Petrie Flom Center at Harvard Law School, features a discussion of the right to try and the right to die.
Read MoreFollowing the Petrie Flom Center's 2017 transparency conference, Oliver has started as a blogger with the center's Bill of Health.
You can find his first blog here.
Read MoreThe year kicked off with the publication of the third edition of A History of Medicine with Professor Lois Magner. Given last year's dramatic debate over the Affordable Care Act, this is an excellent time to reflect on what was and how our system came to be.
Read MoreBuilding off his 2016 law review article, Oliver co-wrote a white paper on health information exchange between the United States and Canada and recommendations from expert panels at a December 2016 workshop.
Read MoreOliver presented an upcoming paper, "Trying and Dying: Are Some Wishes Better?" This paper discusses the debates over the right to try and the right to die in American politics and law.
Read MoreOliver participated in the 2017 Petrie-Flom Center Annual Conference at the Harvard Law School. Entitled “Transparency in Health and Health Care: Legal and Ethical Possibilities and Limits,” the focus was on the legal, ethical, and policy concerns about consumer transparency.
Read MoreOliver's article on cross-border health information exchange was published in the Annals of Health Law, a leading health law journal at Loyola University-Chicago School of Law. His article provided the basis for a white paper sponsored by Cross-Border Health and Personalized Health Care Alliance.
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