Introduction to Public Health, Ethics, and Equity
Author: Sudhir Anand, Fabienne Peter, and Amartya Sen, Eds
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Oxford University Press, 2004. Incorporates wide-ranging, new perspectives in public-health ethics. Includes contributions by eminent scholars from a variety of relevant fields. Investigates the normative implications of empirical research on social inequalities in health. In the last fifty years, average overall health status has increased more or less in parallel with a much celebrated decline in mortality, attributed mostly to poverty reduction, sanitation, nutrition, housing, immunization, and improved medical care. It is becoming increasingly clear, however, that these achievements were not equally distributed. In most countries, while some social groups have benefited significantly, the situation of others has stagnated or may even have worsened. If health is a prerequisite to a person functioning as an agent, inequalities in health constitute inequalities in people's capability to function -- a denial of equality of opportunity. So why should a concern with health equity be singled out from the pursuit of social justice more generally? Can existing theories of justice provide an adequate account of health equity? And what ethical problems arise in evaluating health inequalities? These are some of the important questions that this book addresses in building an interdisciplinary understanding of health equity. With contributions from distinguished philosophers, anthropologists, economists, and public-health specialists, it centres on five major themes: what is health equity?; health equity and social justice; responsibilities for health; ethical issues in health evaluation; and anthropological perspectives.
Program: Environmental Health
Submitted Date: Apr 07, 2009 | Modified Date: Mar 11, 2025
Primary Toolkit: Health Equity and Social Justice Toolkit | Secondary Toolkit: Health Equity and Social Justice Toolkit
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Institution Type: Academic,
Keywords: Environmental Disparities