Kathleen Hoke, JD
Professor Kathleen Hoke is director of the Network for Public Health Law, Eastern Region, and the Legal Resource Center for Public Health Policy at the University of Maryland Francis King Carey School of Law. She teaches the Public Health Law Clinic through which she engages law students in the work of the Network for Public Health Law and the Legal Resource Center for Public Health Policy. She also teaches Public Health and the Law, introducing students to the legal framework within which the public health system operates.The Network for Public Health Law was launched in September 2010 with the goal of providing technical legal assistance to national, state, and local public health professionals, their attorneys, legislators, and advocates working to develop sound public policy to improve public health. The Network for Public Health Law also develops 50-state law surveys, factsheets, issue briefs, webinars, and other useful tools on emerging and persistent public health issues. Under Professor Hoke’s direction, the Network for Public Health Law’s Eastern Region deliverables have focused on environmental health, food safety, and injury prevention. Professor Hoke has conducted research and prepared materials specifically related to hydrofracturing, medical marijuana laws, and health agency access to school health records.Through the Legal Resource Center for Public Health Policy, Professor Hoke provides technical legal assistance to Maryland state and local health officials, legislators, and organizations working in tobacco control. Recent work has focused on the regulation of electronic smoking devices (vapes), prohibition on the sale of flavored tobacco products, raising the age of access to tobacco to 21, and the development of sound policies to create smoke-free multiunit housing.Professor Hoke joined the faculty in 2002 after serving for eight years with the Office of the Attorney General of Maryland. During her tenure as an assistant attorney general, she served in the Civil Litigation Division and the Opinions and Advice Division. As a special assistant attorney general, she worked on a variety of public health initiatives, including tobacco regulation and gun control, and represented the office in multistate cases through the National Association of Attorneys General.Professor Hoke graduated from the University of Maryland School of Law in 1992, having served on the executive board of the Maryland Law Review and as a member of the National Moot Court Team.
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- 0:35New Cancer Treatment: Ultrasound Opens the Brain to ChemoOnly 2% of cancer drugs can reach the brain — but that could change.At UMB, researchers use focused ultrasound before and after brain tumor surgery to open the blood-brain barrier, helping chemo reach where it couldn’t before.Supported by the National Cancer Institute and the National Institute of Neurological Disorders and Stroke, both within the NIH.#CancerResearch #BrainTumor #NIH #FocusedUltrasound #NCI #NINDS #BreakthroughsCantWaitUMB
- 0:54Breakthrough Therapy: Opening the Blood-Brain BarrierAt the University of Maryland, Baltimore, researchers are breaking through one of medicine’s greatest challenges: safely opening the blood-brain barrier to deliver therapies.This breakthrough — supported by the National Cancer Institute and the National Institute of Neurological Disorders and Stroke at the NIH — could transform treatment for brain tumors and neurological diseases.#BrainResearch #BloodBrainBarrier #NIH #NCI #NINDS #MedicalBreakthrough #BreakthroughsCantWaitUMB
- 1:01Focused Ultrasound Enhances Brain Tumor TreatmentCan we treat brain tumors with ultrasound waves?Researchers at the University of Maryland are making it possible — with a new drug delivery method that targets brain tumors directly.This research is supported by the National Cancer Institute and the National Institute of Neurological Disorders and Stroke, both part of the NIH.#BrainTumor #CancerResearch #NIH #NCI #NINDS #MedicalBreakthrough
- 5:00Could Focused Ultrasound Transform Brain Cancer Treatment? | Breakthroughs Can't WaitDr. Graeme Woodworth is opening the door to a promising new treatment for aggressive malignant brain cancer.Focused ultrasound activating bubbles in the blood allow targeted chemotherapy to cross the blood-brain barrier.Graeme F. Woodworth, MD, FACS, chief of neurosurgery at the University of Maryland Medical Center and the Howard M. Eisenberg, MD Distinguished Professor of Neurosurgery and chair of the Department of Neurosurgery at the University of Maryland School of Medicine, is advancing the treatment of glioblastoma, the most common and deadly primary brain cancer in adults. More than 14,000 Americans are diagnosed with glioblastoma each year. Patients typically survive only 12 to18 months after a diagnosis because the cancer quickly spreads throughout the brain.His research is funded by grants from the National Cancer Institute and the National Institute of Neurological Disorders and Stroke, both within the National Institutes of Health.Learn more: https://www.umaryland.edul/breakthroughs#CancerResearch #braincancer #nihresearch #NIH #NINDS #medicalbreakthrough
- 0:53How Malaria Research Saves Children’s Lives | Breakthroughs Can't WaitEvery child deserves a safe and thriving future.At the University of Maryland School of Medicine, Dr. Matthew Laurens is helping lead global research to improve childhood health — with support from the National Institute of Allergy and Infectious Diseases (NIAID).#ChildHealth #GlobalHealth #NIAID #MedicalResearch #PublicHealth #BreakthroughsCantWaitUMB
- 0:50Making Sure Malaria Doesn't Come Back Home | Breakthroughs Can't WaitMalaria isn’t just a global problem — it’s a growing concern here at home. Dr. Matthew Laurens from the University of Maryland School of Medicine explains the risks of malaria’s return to the U.S. and how prevention research is making a difference.#MalariaAwareness #GlobalHealth #DiseasePrevention #MedicalResearch #UMBSOM #BreakthroughsCantWaitUMB