EducationB.A. (Hons. Law), 1975, Kingston University Bio
Nicolas P. Terry is the Hall Render Professor of Law at the Indiana University Robert H. McKinney School of Law. He serves as Co-Director of the Hall Center for Law and Health. Professor Terry teaches Torts, Products Liability, Health Information Technology, Law & Science, and Health Care Quality. Educated at Kingston University and the University of Cambridge, Professor Terry began his academic career as a member of the law faculty of the University of Exeter in England. He has served as a Senior Fellow at Melbourne Law School and held visiting faculty positions at the law schools of Santa Clara University, the University of Missouri-Columbia, Washington University, and the University of Iowa. From 2000-08, Professor Terry served as co-director of Saint Louis University’s Center for Health Law Studies. From 2008-10, Terry served as the School of Law’s Senior Associate Dean. Professor Terry’s research interests lie primarily at the intersection of medicine, law, and information technology. He is a permanent blogger at the HealthLawProf Blog and at Harvard Law School's Bill of Health. Publications(SSRN: http://ssrn.com/author=183691)
Law Review and Journal Articles |
Presentations "Social Media Data and the Physician-Patient Relationship," at ASLME/Health Law Teachers Conference, Arizona State University School of Law, June 9, 2012 “How do Social Media, Mobile Devices, Medical Devices and Implants, Online “Health Websites”, and Clouds Threaten Health Privacy?” at Health Privacy Summit, Georgetown Law Center, June 6-8, 2012 “The Rhetoric of Social Media” on Panel "Rhetoric in Health Law," at SEALS, July 2012, Amelia Island, Florida Keynote, SIH/SIU Health Policy Institute, "EHRs, EMRs, and Healthcare Information Technology: To Meaningful Use and Beyond” May 18, 2012 The Ethics Of ICASM In Healthcare: Social Policy, Legal Responses, And Medical Strategy at The Ethical use of Internet Cloud Based Apps and Social Media (ICASM) in Health Care, Hofstra University Bioethics Center, April 24, 2012. |


