Description
Efnisyfirlit
- Dedication
- Title page
- Copyright page
- Introduction
- Consensuses
- Justifying public health interventions
- Frameworks and human rights
- The structure of this book
- Part I: Moral and Political Philosophy
- Introduction to Part I
- 1: Consequentialism
- Defining consequentialism and utilitarianism
- The naïve utilitarian view of public health
- Concluding remarks
- 2: Non-consequentialism
- Deontology
- Principlism
- Virtue ethics
- Concluding remarks
- 3: Liberal Political Philosophy
- Liberalism and the liberal objection
- Liberalism and Mill’s harm principle
- Freedom: positive and negative conceptions
- Concluding remarks
- 4: Beyond Traditional Liberalism
- Libertarian paternalism
- Non-liberal political philosophy: communitarianism
- Concluding remarks
- Part I Summary
- Part II: Public Health Activities
- Introduction to Part II
- 5: Epidemiology
- Theoretical challenges to epidemiology
- Ethical issues in epidemiologic research
- Epidemiology and virtue ethics
- Concluding remarks
- 6: Health Concepts and Promotion
- Is the nature of health important in public health ethics?
- First conceptual claim: ‘health’ is ambiguous
- Second conceptual claim: health is an evaluative concept
- The practical impact of the conceptual claims
- Concluding remarks
- 7: Health Promotion as Behaviour Modification
- Health promotion as behaviour change
- Ethics and behaviour modification techniques
- Justifying interventions to modify health behaviours
- Concluding remarks
- 8: Harm Reduction
- Defining harm reduction
- The ethics of harm reduction
- Harm reduction: some cases
- Concluding remarks
- 9: Immunization
- Vaccination ethics
- Liberalism and the harm principle
- The duty not to infect others
- Free-riding
- Concluding remarks
- 10: Screening
- Screening programmes
- Generic issues
- Benefit
- Concluding remarks
- Concluding Remarks
- The re-description problem
- Public health ethics and philosophy
- References
- Index
- End User License Agreement
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