Thomas L. Hafemeister
Associate Professor, General Faculty;
Associate Professor of Medical Education, Department of Psychiatry and Neurobehavioral Sciences, School of Medicine
J.D., University of Nebraska, 1982
Ph.D., University of Nebraska, 1988
Thomas Hafemeister is an associate professor at the Law School and an associate professor of medical education in the School of Medicine's Department of Psychiatry and Neurobehavioral Sciences. At the Law School, he teaches Medical Malpractice and Health Care Quality, Bioethics and the Law, Mental Health Law, and Psychiatry and Criminal Law. His recent scholarship has focused on health law (including articles on physician disclosures of emergent medical risks, the influence of direct-to-consumer advertising and Internet-based health information on medical decision-making, and the effect of the pharmaceutical industry supplying gifts to physicians), mental health law, particularly within the criminal justice system (including an article on the impact of the wars in Iraq and Afghanistan on the use of the insanity defense), public health law, elder abuse (including financial abuse of the elderly), child abuse and domestic violence. His is also a co-editor of HealthLawProf Blog, which provides health law resources, information and news to the academic community.
He previously served as director of legal studies at UVA's Institute of Law, Psychiatry and Public Policy, where he provided training programs and consultations to mental health practitioners regarding the law underlying the forensic evaluation process. In recent years, Hafemeister has collaborated with several students on articles that have been published in a wide range of law reviews. He also publishes Developments in Mental Health Law (DMHL), which publishes student papers.
Hafemeister received his J.D. with distinction from the University of Nebraska Law School in 1982 and his Ph.D. in social psychology in 1988 from the University of Nebraska joint J.D./Ph.D. degree program. After graduating from law school, he worked as assistant counsel in the Litigation Division of New York’s Counsel's Office for the Office of Mental Health. Subsequently he became a senior staff attorney/research associate in the Research Division of the National Center for State Courts and was a member of its Institute on Mental Disability and the Law. During this time, he was also an adjunct professor at the Marshall-Wythe School of Law at the College of William & Mary, where he taught a mental health law seminar and Legal Skills. He was then for two years a research associate professor at the University of Nebraska, where he taught and conducted research on public health law and the public health system, and for two years was a visiting assistant professor of law at the Chicago-Kent College of Law, where he taught courses on health law and medical malpractice. Prior to joining the institute, he was the managing editor for the American Health Lawyers Association.
Publications
All Courses
- Bioethics and the Law
- Medical Malpractice
- Mental Health Law
- Psychiatry and Criminal Law
- Public Health Law
In the Media
- "Critically Injured Virginia Teen Dies Before Parents Can Harvest Sperm" (Fox News, 11/08/2012)
- "As Son Lies in Hospital, Va. Parents Seek His Sperm" (The Virginian-Pilot, 10/31/2012)
- "Clinging to Life, Man Hospitalized in Roanoke May Yet Become a Father" (The Roanoke Times, 10/31/2012)
- "Second Va. Resident Files Suit Over Meningitis Outbreak" (The Virginian-Pilot, 10/18/2012)
- "Local, UVa Experts: Health Care Law Will Still Take Years to Implement" (Daily Progress, 06/28/2012)
- "Parents Most Likely Perpetrators in Child Killings" (The Washington Examiner, 03/24/2012)
- "For Mentally Ill Inmates, Health Care Behind Bars is Often Out of Reach" (MSNBC, 02/03/2012)
- "Death Penalty to be Sought in 3 W.Va. Slayings" (Associated Press, 12/30/2011)
- "For Elderly, Stigma of Domestic Violence Keeps it Hidden" (Chicago Tribune, 12/06/2011)
- "Loughner Likely to Stand Trial" (USA Today, 06/14/2011)
- "Stealing from Grandma and Grandpa" (FoxBusiness.com , 06/13/2011)
- "Deal Would Raise Cap on Malpractice Suits in Va." (Virginian-Pilot, 01/11/2011)
- "Elderly Often Have More to Lose in Financial Abuse" (Dallas Morning News, 10/05/2010)
- "Mental Health Challenges Multiplying" (The Greene County Record, 03/26/2010)
- "Advocates: NYC Astor Case a Win on Financial Abuse" (Associated Press, 10/18/2009)
- "Abuse Experts Heartened by Astor Verdict" (The New York Times, 10/10/2009)
- "Astor Trial Is Nearing an End" (The New York Times, 09/22/2009)
- "Courts Charge Mother of 555-Pound Boy" (ABC News, 06/29/2009)
- "Family Caregiving on Contract" (The New York Times, 06/25/2009)
- "Death Request Raises Ethical, Legal Questions (The Daily Progress, 06/21/2009)
- "Amid Financial Abuse, a Blind Spot for Family" (The New York Times, 05/19/2009)
- "The Tricky Question of Competence" (The New York Times, 05/11/2009)
- "To Protect and Serve" (Waynesboro/Staunton News Virginian, 04/14/2008)
- "Mentally Ill in Jail Outnumber Those in Hospitals in Virginia" (WCAV-TV, 10/10/2007)
- "Questions of Competency Stall Legal Cases" (Roanoke Times, 07/22/2007)
- "OxyContin Settlement a Reversal of Fortune/Although Purdue Pharma Had Been Able to Shake Off Civil Lawsuits, It Couldn't Withstand a Federal Investigation" (Roanoke Times, 05/12/2007)
- "Study: Older Adults Less Reliable Witnesses/Report May Have Implications for Court Proceedings" (Daily Progress, 03/05/2007)
- "Squawking Chickens Hit Legislators' Door" (Roanoke Times, 10/24/2006)
- "Fleecing of Elderly a Hidden Offense/Fear and Denial Hamper State's Increased Efforts to Seek Justice" (Houston Chronicle, 09/24/2006)
- "Experts: Defendant's Mental Illness Can Lead to Vote for Execution" (Associated Press , 05/01/2005)
- "Experts: Insanity, Death Penalty in Highway Shootings Tough Sell" (Associated Press, 04/10/2005)
- "Hypnosis Evidence Contested in Va./Testimony Tainted, Defense Argues" (The Washington Post , 03/03/2005)
- "They Also Serve" (AScribe Pittsburgh Post-Gazette, 12/09/2003)
- "Commentary: Everyday Heroes, Courting Stress" (The Washington Post, 12/01/2003)
- "We, The Jury" (Hamilton Spectator, 11/29/2003)
- "For Jurors, Stress of Capital Case Can Linger/Researchers Find an Emotional Toll" (The Washington Post, 11/21/2003)
- "Teen Sniper Suspect To Plead Insanity" (National Post, 11/11/2003)
- "Jury Selection Begins For Second Sniper Suspect" (The Gazette, 11/11/2003)
- "Jury Selection Starts In Malvo Sniper Trial" (Deseret News, 11/10/2003)
- "Malvo's Defense To Stress Control By Muhammad" (Chattanooga Times Free Press, 11/10/2003)