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Published in: Health Care Analysis 4/2017

01-12-2017 | Original Article

Ethical Frameworks in Public Health Decision-Making: Defending a Value-Based and Pluralist Approach

Authors: Kalle Grill, Angus Dawson

Published in: Health Care Analysis | Issue 4/2017

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Abstract

A number of ethical frameworks have been proposed to support decision-making in public health and the evaluation of public health policy and practice. This is encouraging, since ethical considerations are of paramount importance in health policy. However, these frameworks have various deficiencies, in part because they incorporate substantial ethical positions. In this article, we discuss and criticise a framework developed by James Childress and Ruth Bernheim, which we consider to be the state of the art in the field. Their framework distinguishes aims, such as the promotion of public health, from constraints on the pursuit of those aims, such as the requirement to avoid limitations to liberty, or the requirement to be impartial. We show how this structure creates both theoretical and practical problems. We then go on to present and defend a more practical framework, one that is neutral in avoiding precommitment to particular values and how they ought to be weighted. We believe ethics is at the very heart of such weightings and our framework is developed to reflect this belief. It is therefore both pluralist and value-based. We compare our new framework to Childress and Bernheim’s and outline its advantages. It is justified by its impetus to consider a wide range of alternatives and its tendency to direct decisions towards the best alternatives, as well as by the information provided by the ranking of alternatives and transparent explication of the judgements that motivate this ranking. The new framework presented should be useful to decision-makers in public health, as well as being a means to stimulate further reflection on the role of ethics in public health.
Footnotes
1
Step 5 is the closest we come to a publicity condition. Our modest commitment to publicity is one of the things that distinguishes our framework from Daniels and Sabin's Accountability for Reasonableness framework. Our framework also does not contain any steps corresponding to the relevance or the revision and appeals condition of Daniels and Sabin's framework [5, e.g. pp. 118, 119]. We do not engage with the issue of how the decision-maker should form her moral outlook, but limit ourselves to the issue of how she should decide based on the moral outlook she has. That said, we do believe that using our framework will promote transparency and accountability, as well as moral development or learning, as we will explain below.
 
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Metadata
Title
Ethical Frameworks in Public Health Decision-Making: Defending a Value-Based and Pluralist Approach
Authors
Kalle Grill
Angus Dawson
Publication date
01-12-2017
Publisher
Springer US
Published in
Health Care Analysis / Issue 4/2017
Print ISSN: 1065-3058
Electronic ISSN: 1573-3394
DOI
https://doi.org/10.1007/s10728-015-0299-6

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