Seeking fair treatment from the AIDS epidemic to national health care reform

With precision and insight, Daniels probes the issues of justice that underlie central controversies about how we should treat each other in the HIV epidemic, controversies that are intrinsically linked to the problems of designing a better national health care system. These include the duty of phys...

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1. Verfasser: Daniels, Norman (VerfasserIn)
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Sprache:eng
Veröffentlicht: New York u.a. Oxford Univ. Press 1995
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Beschreibung
Zusammenfassung:With precision and insight, Daniels probes the issues of justice that underlie central controversies about how we should treat each other in the HIV epidemic, controversies that are intrinsically linked to the problems of designing a better national health care system. These include the duty of physicians to treat HIV patients; the conflicting rights of patients and infected health care workers; the insurability of those at high risk; the rights of patients to unproven drugs; the rationing of expensive treatments; and the education of students in our public schools about safe sex practices
Seeking Fair Treatment makes a major contribution to the health care debate and forces us to examine the current state and pace of health care reform in this country. Whether or not the present health care system emerges fundamentally changed (in whole or in part), the lessons of the AIDS epidemic are lessons we must all take to heart if we are to succeed in treating each other fairly through health care reform. Arguing passionately that access to health care is not merely a goal for a just society, but a requirement, Norman Daniels provides a framework for coming to terms with one of the great moral crises of our time
Beschreibung:IX, 204 S.
ISBN:0195057120
0-19505-712-0