David Orentlicher

David Orentlicher is an educator, physician, attorney, and an American politician. He is a member of the Democratic Party and is the Cobeaga Law Firm Professor at UNLV William S. Boyd School of Law and co-director of the UNLV Health Law Program. He teaches courses in health care law and constitutional law. Orentlicher also has held visiting or adjunct teaching positions at Princeton University, the University of Chicago Law School, Indiana University: Robert H. McKinney School of Law, University of Iowa College of Law, and Northwestern University Medical School.

David Orentlicher
Member of the Indiana House of Representatives
from the 86th district
In office
2002–2008
Preceded byJim Atterholt[1]
Succeeded byEdward DeLaney
Personal details
Political partyDemocratic
Spouse(s)Judy
ResidenceLas Vegas, Nevada
Alma materHarvard University
Occupationphysician, attorney, educator

Life and career

Orentlicher graduated from Harvard Medical School and then completed an internship in internal medicine. After practicing as a family physician, he returned to Harvard Law School for his Juris Doctor. After clerking on the U.S. Court of Appeals for the Fifth Circuit, he practiced law for two years before joining the American Medical Association, where he served as Ethics and Health Policy Counsel and directed the AMA's division of medical ethics. While there, he drafted the AMA's first ever Patients' Bill of Rights, guidelines for physician investment in health care facilities that were incorporated into federal law, and guidelines on gifts to physicians from industry that have become the industry standard and a standard recognized by the federal government. He helped develop many other positions—on end-of-life matters, organ transplantation, and reproductive issues—that have been cited by courts and government agencies in their decision-making. He is a member of the American Law Institute and a fellow of the Hastings Center, an independent bioethics research institution.[2]

A resident of Las Vegas, Orentlicher and his wife Judy have two children, Cy and Shay.

In June 2020, Orentlicher won his primary for the Nevada Assembly in District 20 and has no opposition for the seat in November 2020.[3][4]

Legislative work

Rep. Orentlicher served in the Indiana House from 2002 to 2008. He represented the 86th House District, which consisted of a northern portion of Indianapolis in Marion County and a small portion of Carmel in Hamilton County.

Committee membership

Rep. Orentlicher served as Committee Chair for the Small Business & Economic Development Committee and as a member of the Insurance Committee and the Technology, Research, & Development Committee.

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gollark: You haven't heard of Karl Gruen?
gollark: This would only be better if workers would be allowed to decide between themselves to work, and by means of political means they would have a higher power. The chief representative and classical type of this tendency is Mr Karl Gruen. In particular, it may be seen that at work it is not possible to produce more workers and more people, if this is the case. Bourgeois Socialism attains adequate expression when, and only when, it becomes a mere figureof speech. It is an attitude which allows the individual to express his own mind without any kind of form of communication, but can be regarded as a mere expression of the mind.
gollark: If I post a large wall of text, it is *generally* copied off the internet.
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References

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