The Patient as Victim and Vector: Ethics and Infectious Disease The Patient as Victim and Vector: Ethics and Infectious Disease

The Patient as Victim and Vector: Ethics and Infectious Disease

Margaret P. Battin and Others
    • $49.99
    • $49.99

Publisher Description

Bioethics emerged at a time when infectious diseases were not a major concern. Thus bioethics never had to develop a normative framework sensitive to situations of disease transmission. The Patient as Victim and Vector explores how traditional and new issues in clinical medicine, research, public health, and health policy might look different in infectious disease were treated as central. The authors argue that both practice and policy must recognize that a patient with a communicable infectious disease is not only a victim of that disease, but also a potential vector- someone who may transmit an illness that will sicken or kill others. Bioethics has failed to see one part of this duality, they document, and public health the other: that the patient is both victim and vector at one and the same time.

The Patient as Victim and Vector is jointly written by four authors at the University of Utah with expertise in bioethics, health law, and both clinical practice and public health policy concerning infectious disease. Part I shows how the patient-centered ethic that was developed by bioethics- especially the concept of autonomy- needs to change in the context of public health, and Part II develops a normative theory for doing so. Part III examines traditional and new issues involving infectious disease: the ethics of quarantine and isolation, research, disease screening, rapid testing, antibiotic use, and immunization, in contexts like multi-drug-resistant tuberculosis, syphilis, hepatitis, HIV/AIDS, and HPV. Part IV, beginning with a controversial thought experiment, considers constraint in the control of infectious disease, include pandemics, and Part V 'thinks big' about the global scope of infectious disease and efforts to prevent, treat, or eradicate it.

This volume should have a major impact in the fields of bioethics and public health ethics. It will also interest philosophers, lawyers, health law experts, physicians, and policy makers, as well as those concerned with global health.

GENRE
Professional & Technical
RELEASED
2008
October 31
LANGUAGE
EN
English
LENGTH
576
Pages
PUBLISHER
Oxford University Press
SELLER
The Chancellor, Masters and Scholars of the University of Oxford trading as Oxford University Press
SIZE
2.6
MB

More Books Like This

The Anthropology of Infectious Disease The Anthropology of Infectious Disease
2013
Public And Professional Attitudes Toward Aids Patients Public And Professional Attitudes Toward Aids Patients
2019
Plagues and Epidemics Plagues and Epidemics
2020
Ethical Health Care Ethical Health Care
2017
Thinking Through Resistance Thinking Through Resistance
2017
Negotiating the Pandemic Negotiating the Pandemic
2022

More Books by Margaret P. Battin, Leslie P Francis, Jay A Jacobson & Charles B. Smith

Drugs and Justice Drugs and Justice
2007
Physician Assisted Suicide Physician Assisted Suicide
2015
Death, Dying and the Ending of Life, Volumes I and II Death, Dying and the Ending of Life, Volumes I and II
2019