Johnson Tess, Ndlovu Lerato, Baiyegunhi Omolara O, Lora Wezzie S, Desmond Nicola
Ethox Centre, Nuffield Department of Population Health, University of Oxford, Oxford, UK.
Pandemic Sciences Institute, Nuffield Department of Medicine, University of Oxford, Oxford, UK.
Monash Bioeth Rev. 2024 Oct 15. doi: 10.1007/s40592-024-00218-x.
Public health policies designed to improve individual and population health may involve coercion. These coercive policies require ethical justification, and yet it is unclear in the public health ethics literature which ethical concepts might justify coercion, and what their limitations are in applying across contexts. In this paper, we analyse a number of concepts from Western bioethics, including the harm principle, paternalism, the public interest, and a duty of easy rescue. We find them plausible justifications for coercion in theory, but when applied to case studies, including HIV testing in Malawi, vaccine mandates in South Africa, and prohibitions of antibiotic use in livestock in the EU, their limitations become clear. We argue that the context-specificity of ethical justifications for coercion has been overlooked, and there is more work needed to identify context-relevant ethical justifications for coercive policies in various settings and for various populations, rather than relying on universalising Western bioethical justifications across all contexts.
旨在改善个人和群体健康的公共卫生政策可能涉及强制手段。这些强制性政策需要伦理依据,然而在公共卫生伦理文献中,尚不清楚哪些伦理概念可以为强制手段提供正当理由,以及它们在不同情境中的应用存在哪些局限性。在本文中,我们分析了西方生物伦理学中的一些概念,包括伤害原则、家长主义、公共利益和易于施救的义务。我们发现它们在理论上似乎是强制手段的合理依据,但在应用于案例研究时,包括马拉维的艾滋病毒检测、南非的疫苗强制令以及欧盟对牲畜使用抗生素的禁令,其局限性就变得明显了。我们认为,强制手段伦理依据的情境特异性被忽视了,需要做更多工作来确定在不同环境和针对不同人群的强制性政策中与情境相关的伦理依据,而不是依赖于将西方生物伦理学依据普遍应用于所有情境。