Promoting Healthy Behavior: How Much Freedom? Whose Responsibility?Daniel Callahan Georgetown University Press, 04/02/2000 - 192 من الصفحات The government, the media, HMOs, and individual Americans have all embraced programs to promote disease prevention. Yet obesity is up, exercise is down, teenagers continue to smoke, and sexually transmitted disease is rampant. Why? These intriguing essays examine the ethical and social problems that create subtle obstacles to changing Americans' unhealthy behavior. The contributors raise profound questions about the role of the state or employers in trying to change health-related behavior, about the actual health and economic benefits of even trying, and about the freedom and responsibility of those of us who, as citizens, will be the target of such efforts. They ask, for instance, whether we are all equally free to live healthy lives or whether social and economic conditions make a difference. Do disease prevention programs actually save money, as is commonly argued? What is the moral legitimacy of using economic and other incentives to change people's behavior, especially when (as with HMOs) the goal is to control costs? One key issue explored throughout the book is the fundamental ambivalence of traditionally libertarian Americans about health promotion programs: we like the idea of good health, but we do not want government or others posing threats to our personal lifestyle choices. The contributors argue that such programs will continue to prove less than wholly successful without a fuller examination of their place in our national values. |
من داخل الكتاب
النتائج 1-5 من 32
... social context in which individual health behavior takes place that must ... justice have we begun to appreciate the health consequences of such ... social environment in which health - related behavior takes place . Finally , the ...
... Social justice is pursued to prevent systemic discrimination and to reduce health inequities . • Health of the present generation is not purchased at the expense of future generations . 94 As noted earlier , even health - promotion ...
... Justice ( Notre Dame , Ind .: University of Notre Dame Press , 1987 ) . 41. Robert Bellah , The Good Society ( New York : Alfred A. Knopf , 1991 ) . 42. Michael J. Sandel , Liberalism and the Limits of Justice ... Social Class : Implications ...
... social justice , guided by the principle that death and disease are collective problems , and all persons are entitled to health protection . " Should managed care , rooted as it is in market justice and market individualism , drive ...
لقد وصلت إلى حد العرض المسموح لهذا الكتاب.
المحتوى
23 | |
HELEN HALPIN SCHAUFFLER | 37 |
E HAAVI MORREIM | 56 |
ANN ROBERTSON | 76 |
RONALD LABONTE | 95 |
Finding | 137 |
MEREDITH MINKLER | 153 |
Contributors | 171 |