Preventive medicine between obligation and aspiration
著者
書誌事項
Preventive medicine between obligation and aspiration
(International library of ethics, law, and the new medicine, v. 4)
Kluwer Academic Publishers, c2000
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注記
Includes bibliographical references and index
内容説明・目次
内容説明
Preventive Medicine between Obligation and Aspiration is a study of ethical questions regarding mass screening, vaccination, and health policy programmes. These interventions aim to enhance public health but may also constrain personal autonomy and cause harm, and influence our moral views. So far, these issues have hardly been subject to systematic ethical analysis. This study aims to fill this gap by providing an overview of moral problems in preventive medicine and by explicating norms for good practice. Throughout the book it is argued that some moral concerns about prevention - namely concerns about medicalization - cannot be adequately grasped in terms of strict and binding moral norms. Various moral concepts and types of norms `beyond obligation' are explored and developed in order to give practical meaning to these rather vague concerns. In this way the book contributes to applied ethics as well as to ethical theory. It is of interest to professionals in public health and preventive medicine and to scholars in applied ethics and moral philosophy.
目次
Preface and acknowledgements. 1. Introduction. Part I: Preventive Medicine: Moral Problems and Moral Norms. 2. What is preventive medicine? 3. Medical-ethical dimensions of preventive medicine. 4. The prevention paradox and tensions between private and public interests. 5. Medicalization as a moral problem for preventive medicine. Part II: Obligation and Beyond. 6. The concept of duty and obligation. 7. Medicalization, moral obligations and beyond. 8. Beyond obligation. Conclusions. Bibliography. Index.
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