Global health crisis : ethical responsibilities [electronic resource]
by Thana Cristina de Campos.
- Cambridge : Cambridge University Press, 2017.
- 1 online resource (292 p.)
Table of contents: Chapter 1. The moral value of health : health as a basic human need Chapter 2. The human right to health and its corresponding responsibilities Chapter 3. States and natural persons as subjects of justice Chapter 4. Pharmaceutical transnational corporations as subjects of justice Chapter 5. The global health governance of the global health crisis.
Includes bibliography and index.
Proposing a new view of global justice based on natural law, this book presents a discussion of the key ethical values in contemporary medicine and health, notably in relation to neglected diseases like malaria, Ebola and Zika. The lack of treatments for such diseases point to a global health crisis. Thana Cristina de Campos provides a general framework, based on global commutative justice, for discussion of the ethical responsibilities of international stakeholders, mapping the varying duties they have, and their content and force. She also addresses the urgent need for reforms to the international legal rules on bioethics, notably the system of intellectual property rights. These ideas will be of interest to those who are looking for a more nuanced view of the human right to health than that provided by advocates in the globalist mainstream.