Document Type
Article
Publication Date
8-2023
Abstract
Medical-legal partnerships (MLPs) integrate lawyers into the medical team to address patients’ unmet legal needs that create barriers to good health and well-being (i.e., “health-harming legal needs”) and improve health outcomes. Given the growing popularity of MLP as an innovative healthcare model, this review has two objectives: to identify peer-reviewed literature measuring (1) cancer patients’ legal needs, and (2) outcomes for cancer patients after receiving MLP legal services. A systematic literature search was conducted in concordance with the Preferred Reporting Items for Systematic Reviews and Meta-Analyses (PRISMA) for the period 2006- 2022. Four articles met the inclusion criteria for objective one: three articles, including one that also met the inclusion criteria for objective one, met the inclusion criteria for objective two, for a total of six articles. Literature confirms that when screened, cancer patients regularly struggle with health-harming legal needs. Further published research is needed to better identify and understand the unmet legal needs of cancer patients and the impact of MLPs on cancer patients’ outcomes.
Scholarly Commons Citation
Dowling, Allison B.; Jensen, Caitlin Schille; Sweeney, Abigail; Dorris, C. Scott; and Perry, Deborah F., "Legal Needs and Health Outcomes for People with Cancer in Medical-Legal Partnership Programs: A Systematic Review" (2023). HJA Scholarship. 1.
https://scholarship.law.georgetown.edu/hja_scholarship/1
Comments
Journal of Health Care for the Poor and Underserved, Vol. 34, No. 3, Pp. 1105-1120.