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Title of Article

NATIONAL PROJECT «NEW TECHNOLOGIES FOR SAVING HEALTH»: SOCIO-LEGAL AND CRIMINAL-POLITICAL ASPECTS IN THE KEY TO THE DEVELOPMENT OF INNOVATIVE MEDICINE


Issue
6
Date
2025

Article type
scientific article
UDC
 
Pages
154-159
Keywords
уголовная политика, инновационная медицина, национальный проект, здоровье, преступность, ответственность, риски, законодательство, criminal policy, innovative medicine, national project, health, crime, responsibility, risks, legislation


Authors
Chernykh E.E.
Natsionalnyy issledovatelskiy Nizhegorodskiy gosudarstvennyy universitet im. N.I. Lobachevskogo; Nizhegorodskaya akademiya MVD RossiiNational Research Lobachevsky State University of Nizhny Novgorod; Nizhny Novgorod Academy of the Ministry of Internal Affairs of Russia


Abstract
This article is devoted to the study of the political and legal architecture of the national project «New Technologies for Saving Health» as a key tool for responding to demographic challenges, technological dependence and the growing complexity of medical interventions associated with biomedical and digital innovations. The accelerated introduction of appropriate techniques and technologies into clinical practice generates new legal and ethical risks, from conflicts in the issue of criminal law assessment to a lack of preventive guarantees for the quality of services provided. In this regard, a systemic value-based legal framework for innovative medicine is proposed, built around the principles of technological sovereignty, preventativeness and personalization, ethical safety of innovation, evidence-based clinical validation, extended informed consent, confidentiality and cybersecurity of medical data, flexible regulatory environment, patient-centricity and territorial accessibility, full compensation for harm and legal liability. It is argued that the implementation of these guiding principles in the architecture of the national project in particular and the state program for the development of healthcare in general forms an "end-to-end" contour that not only connects science and clinical practice with legal guarantees, but also simultaneously stimulates a conceptual balance between the interests of technological development and crime prevention.

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