ABSTRACT

The purpose of public and community health is to improve the health of populations or groups rather than concentrating on individuals. This book examines the ethical issues associated with public and community health.
The contributors analyse the major ethical issues in public health - prioritisation, public participation, health promotion and screening - all of which reflect current practice in the UK. They examine what health services should be available, who should have access to which health services, what are the best strategies for preventing disease, how can professional and public views be reconciled and when can an individual's health needs override the choice of a community.
The contributors apply up-to-date ethical theory to practical examples in public health practice to provide a comprehensive and accessible introduction to the key issues in public health ethics.

part |77 pages

Rationing and Prioritisation

chapter |17 pages

Application of Ethical Theory to Rationing in Health Care in the UK

A Move to More Explicit Principles?

chapter |9 pages

Ethics and the Extra-Contractual Referral

A Case Study from Northamptonshire Health Authority

part |53 pages

Screening

chapter |13 pages

Screening

General Principles

chapter |13 pages

Antenatal Screening

chapter |13 pages

Childhood Screening

part |56 pages

Health Promotion, Research and Public Participation in Health Care