Book Announcement
Health and Social Justice
by Jennifer Prah Ruger.
Foreword by Amartya Sen -
Website: http://ukcatalogue.oup.com/product/9780199559978.do
Introduction PDF available online [26p.] at: http://fds.oup.com/www.oup.com/pdf/13/9780199559978_prelim.pdf
“…….Societies make decisions and take actions that profoundly impact the distribution of health.
Why and how should collective choices be made, and policies implemented, to address health inequalities under conditions of resource scarcity?
How should societies conceptualize and measure health disparities, and determine whether they've been adequately addressed?
Who is responsible for various aspects of this important social problem? ….
The author elucidates principles to guide these decisions, the evidence that should inform them, and the policies necessary to build equitable and efficient health systems world-wide. This book weaves together original insights and disparate constructs to produce a foundational new theory, the health capability paradigm.
Ruger's theory takes the ongoing debates about the theoretical underpinnings of national health disparities and systems in striking new directions. It shows the limitations of existing approaches (utilitarian, libertarian, Rawlsian, communitarian), and effectively balances a consequentialist focus on health outcomes and costs with a proceduralist respect for individuals' health agency.
Through what Ruger calls shared health governance, it emphasizes responsibility and choice. It allows broader assessment of injustices, including attributes and conditions affecting individuals' "human flourishing," as well as societal structures within which resource distribution occurs.
Addressing complex issues at the intersection of philosophy, economics, and politics in health, this fresh perspective bridges the divide between the collective and the individual, between personal freedom and social welfare, equality and efficiency, and science and economics….”
Content:
Introduction
Part I: The Current Set of Ethical Frameworks
1. Approaches to Medical and Public Health Ethics
1.1. Welfare economic and utilitarian approaches
1.2. Communitarianism and liberal communitarianism
1.3. Egalitarian theories: equal opportunity and equal welfare
1.4. Libertarian and market-based approaches
1.5. Deliberative democratic procedures
1.6. Summary of problems with the current set of frameworks
Part II: An Alternative Account—The Health Capability Paradigm
2. Health and Human Flourishing
2.1. Aristotle’s theory
2.1.1. Human flourishing
2.1.2. Appropriate ends of political activity
2.1.3. Enabling functioning as a measure of political arrangements
2.1.4. Other ends for political action
2.1.5. Defining flourishing 47
2.2. The capability approach
2.2.1. Capability sets
2.2.2. Heterogeneity
2.2.3. Measures of well-being
2.2.4. Freedom: opportunity and process
2.2.5. Selection and valuation
2.2.6. Basic capabilities
2.2.7. An underspecified theory
2.3. Capability and health policy
3. Pluralism, Incompletely Theorized Agreements, and Public Policy
3.1. Social choice theory, collective rationality, and Arrow’s impossibility result
3.1.1. Problems in social choice
3.1.2. Arrow’s impossibility theorem
3.2. Incompletely theorized agreements
3.3. Incompletely specified agreements
3.4. Incompletely specified and generalized agreements
3.5. Incompletely theorized agreements on particular outcomes
3.6. Incompletely theorized agreements and public policy
3.7. Pluralism, ambiguity, and incompletely theorized agreements
3.8. Incompletely theorized agreements and health capability
3.9. Health capability set: central and non-central health capabilities
4. Justice, Capability, and Health Policy
4.1. Trans-positionality: a global view of health
4.1.1. Health capabilities: health functionings, health needs, and health agency
4.1.2. Health and disease
4.2. Equality, sufficiency, and priority
4.2.1. A hybrid account: measuring inequality in health policy
4.2.2. Attainment and shortfall equality
4.3. Efficiency and health policy
4.4. Ethics of the social determinants of health
4.5. Limitations and objections
4.5.1. Capability, not opportunity or utility
4.5.2. Other critiques and objections
4.6. Principles of the health capability paradigm
5. Grounding the Right to Health
5.1. Scope and content of a right to health
5.2. Duties and obligations in domestic and international policy and law: ethical commitments and public moral norms
5.3. Positive and negative rights: a constitutional right to medical self-defence
Part III: Domestic Health Policy Applications
6. A Health Capability Account of Equal Access
6.1. Rethinking equal access: agency, quality, and norms
6.1.1. Defining equal access and a right to health care
6.1.2. Equal opportunity and equal resources
6.1.3. Rethinking equal access: a health capability perspective
6.1.4. Justification for high-quality care
6.1.5. Health agency
6.1.6. Health norms
6.2. High-quality care and a two-tiered system
6.3. Responsibility and health: voluntary risk compared with involuntary risk
6.4. Paternalism, libertarian paternalism, and free will
7. A Health Capability Account of Equitable and Efficient Health Financing and Insurance
7.1. Theory of demand for health insurance
7.2. Behavioural economics and prospect theory
7.3. Medical ethics and equal access to health care
7.4. Welfare economics and the capability approach
7.5. Vulnerability and insecurity
7.6. Moral foundations of health insurance
7.7. Gains in well-being from risk pooling and health insurance
7.8. Empirical evidence on the equity of health financing models
7.9. Market failures, public goods, and the role of the public sector
8. Allocating Resources: A Joint Scientific and Deliberative Approach
8.1. Reasoned consensus through scientific and deliberative processes
8.2. Frameworks for combining technical and ethical rationality for collective choice
8.3. Allocations within the broader social budget
8.4. Allocating within the health policy budget: benefits package: types of goods and services guaranteed
8.5. An evidence-based approach: medical appropriateness and clinical practice guidelines
8.6. Medical futility and setting limits
8.7. Universal benefits package
8.8. Hard cases: the ‘bottomless pit objection’ and ‘reasonable accommodation’
8.9. Joint clinical and economic solutions: incorporating efficiency
8.10. Resource allocation and age: reaching the highest average life expectancy
Part IV: Domestic Health Reform
9. Political and Moral Legitimacy: A Normative Theory of Health Policy Decision-Making
9.1. Public moral norms and domestic health reforms
9.2. Norms and values in the public’s assessment of policy
9.3. Alternative frameworks: political conceptions and political processes
9.4. Case study: the Clinton Administration and failed health reform
9.5. A model of American health care reform and incomplete theorization
9.5.1. Agreement on universal health care coverage
9.5.2. Multiple high-level theories for universal coverage
9.5.3. Strategies for attaining universal coverage
9.6. A wedge theory of health care reform
9.7. Internalization and agreement on moral values
Conclusion
Bibliography
Book reviews: http://equity.posterous.com/book-announcement-health-and-social-justice-b
* * *
This message from the Pan American Health Organization, PAHO/WHO, is part of an effort to disseminate
information Related to: Equity; Health inequality; Socioeconomic inequality in health; Socioeconomic
health differentials; Gender; Violence; Poverty; Health Economics; Health Legislation; Ethnicity; Ethics;
Information Technology - Virtual libraries; Research & Science issues. [DD/ KMC Area]
“Materials provided in this electronic list are provided "as is". Unless expressly stated otherwise, the findings
and interpretations included in the Materials are those of the authors and not necessarily of The Pan American
Health Organization PAHO/WHO or its country members”.
------------------------------------------------------------------------------------
PAHO/WHO Website
Equity List - Archives - Join/remove: http://listserv.paho.org/Archives/equidad.html
Twitter http://twitter.com/eqpaho
IMPORTANT: This transmission is for use by the intended recipient and it may contain privileged, proprietary or confidential information. If you are not the intended recipient or a person responsible for delivering this transmission to the intended recipient, you may not disclose, copy or distribute this transmission or take any action in reliance on it. If you received this transmission in error, please notify us immediately by email to infosec@paho.org, and please dispose of and delete this transmission. Thank you.