Book contents
- Frontmatter
- Contents
- List of contributors
- Introduction
- Section 1 Global health, definitions and descriptions
- Section 2 Global health ethics, responsibilities and justice: some central issues
- 6 Is there a need for global health ethics? For and against
- 7 Justice, infectious diseases and globalization
- 8 International health inequalities and global justice: toward a middle ground
- 9 The human right to health
- 10 Responsibility for global health
- 11 Global health ethics: the rationale for mutual caring
- Section 3 Analyzing some reasons for poor health
- Section 4 Shaping the future
- Index
- References
7 - Justice, infectious diseases and globalization
Published online by Cambridge University Press: 01 March 2011
- Frontmatter
- Contents
- List of contributors
- Introduction
- Section 1 Global health, definitions and descriptions
- Section 2 Global health ethics, responsibilities and justice: some central issues
- 6 Is there a need for global health ethics? For and against
- 7 Justice, infectious diseases and globalization
- 8 International health inequalities and global justice: toward a middle ground
- 9 The human right to health
- 10 Responsibility for global health
- 11 Global health ethics: the rationale for mutual caring
- Section 3 Analyzing some reasons for poor health
- Section 4 Shaping the future
- Index
- References
Summary
The ethical importance of infectious diseases
The ethical importance of infectious diseases partly relates to the fact that their consequences are almost unrivalled. Historically they have caused more morbidity and mortality than any other cause, including war (Price-Smith, 2001). The Black Death eliminated one-third of the European population in just a few years during the mid-fourteenth century (Ziegler, 1969); the 1918 flu epidemic killed between 20 and 100 million people (Crosby, 2003); tuberculosis (TB) killed a billion people during the past two centuries (Ryan, 1992); and smallpox killed between 300 and 500 million people during the twentieth century alone – i.e. three times more than were killed by all the wars of that period (Oldstone, 1998).
Second, because the public health measures used to control them sometimes involve infringement of widely accepted individual rights and liberties, infectious diseases raise difficult philosophical questions about how to strike a balance between the goal to protect the greater good of public health and the goal to protect individual rights and liberties. Quarantine and travel restrictions, for example, violate the right to freedom of movement. Other public health measures – such as contact tracing, the notification of third parties, and the reporting of the health status of individuals to authorities – can interfere with the right to privacy. Mandatory treatment and vaccination, finally, conflicts with the right to informed consent.
- Type
- Chapter
- Information
- Global Health and Global Health Ethics , pp. 89 - 96Publisher: Cambridge University PressPrint publication year: 2011
References
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