Freedman Benjamin
Can Fam Physician. 1990 Mar;36:479-82.
The author examines and rejects two common types of argument in support of the duty to care for persons infected with HIV, namely, the view that exposure to this contagion has been accepted (individually or communally) by physicians, and the view that physicians can be held to a high standard of moral conduct that encompasses a substantial degree of self-sacrifice. He suggests rather that the duty to care for the HIV-infectious patient is grounded in the harm that would ensue were discrimination to be permitted, and in fairness to those members of the medical profession who refuse to discriminate.
作者审视并驳斥了支持照顾艾滋病毒感染者义务的两种常见论点,即认为医生(个人或集体)已接受接触这种传染病,以及认为医生应遵守包含高度自我牺牲的高标准道德行为的观点。他反而认为,照顾艾滋病毒感染患者的义务基于如果允许歧视将会产生的伤害,以及对那些拒绝歧视的医疗行业成员的公平。