Steve Biko Center for Bioethics, School of Clinical Medicine, University of Witwatersrand, Johannesburg, South Africa.
Front Public Health. 2024 Mar 6;12:1303949. doi: 10.3389/fpubh.2024.1303949. eCollection 2024.
In this paper, we draw on the thinking about solidarity, reciprocity and distributive justice grounded in Afro-communitarian ethics from the Global South to argue for institutions, particularly the South African (SA) government, have a duty to foster influenza vaccine uptake for adults 65 years and older. Although we focus specifically on the South African government to defend our position, we believe that our argument extends to all governments. Notably, these duties are that the SA government ought to make influenza vaccines freely available for the older adult in both the public and private health facilities, provided financial allocation and their extant relationships allow for this. Further, the SA government has a duty to improve influenza vaccine procurement and availability in the country, preferably through increasing manufacturing capabilities. This paper is intrinsically valuable to promote epistemic justice, thereby contributing toward the decolonization of the global healthcare system. Moreover, this project has social significance in contributing to mitigation efforts against future public health challenges associated with population aging in resource-limited developing African nations, wherein the impact of population transition will be felt most.
在本文中,我们借鉴了来自南方的非裔共同体主义伦理中关于团结、互惠和分配正义的思想,主张机构——特别是南非政府——有责任促进老年人(65 岁及以上)接种流感疫苗。虽然我们专门针对南非政府来捍卫我们的立场,但我们相信我们的论点适用于所有政府。值得注意的是,这些义务是指南非政府应该在公共和私人卫生机构中为老年人免费提供流感疫苗,前提是财政拨款和现有的关系允许这样做。此外,南非政府有责任改善该国的流感疫苗采购和供应情况,最好是通过提高生产能力。本文对于促进认识论正义具有内在价值,从而有助于实现全球医疗保健系统的非殖民化。此外,该项目在应对与资源有限的非洲发展中国家人口老龄化相关的未来公共卫生挑战的缓解工作方面具有社会意义,因为人口转型的影响在这些国家将最为明显。