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El. knyga: Wounded Planet

(Duquesne University)
  • Formatas: PDF+DRM
  • Išleidimo metai: 14-May-2019
  • Leidėjas: Johns Hopkins University Press
  • Kalba: eng
  • ISBN-13: 9781421427461
  • Formatas: PDF+DRM
  • Išleidimo metai: 14-May-2019
  • Leidėjas: Johns Hopkins University Press
  • Kalba: eng
  • ISBN-13: 9781421427461

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Exploring the interconnectedness of human health, biodiversity, and bioethics.

We all depend on environmental biodiversity for clean air, safe water, adequate nutrition, effective drugs, and protection from infectious diseases. Today's healthcare experts and policymakers are keenly aware that biodiversity is one of the crucial determinants of healthnot only for individuals but also for the human population of the planet. Unfortunately, rapid globalization and ongoing environmental degradation mean that biodiversity is rapidly deteriorating, threatening planetary health on a mass scale.

In Wounded Planet, Henk A.M.J. ten Have argues that the ethical debate about healthcare has become too narrow and individualized. We must, he writes, adopt a new bioethical discourseone that deals with issues of justice, equality, vulnerability, human rights, and solidarityin order to adequately reflect the serious threat that current loss of biodiversity poses to planetary health. Exploring modern environmental challenges in depth, ten Have persuasively demonstrates that environmental concerns can no longer be separated from healthcare challenges, and thus should be included in global bioethics.

Going beyond an individualized perspective, he poses audacious questions: What does it mean that patients are poor or uninsured and cannot afford suggested medicines? How can we deal with the air and water pollution that are producing a patient's illness? How do we respond to patients complaining about the safety and quality of drinking water in their neighborhood? Touching on infectious and noncommunicable diseases, as well as food, medicine, and water, Wounded Planet transcends the limited vision of mainstream bioethics to compassionately reveal how healthcare and medicine must take a broad perspective that includes the social and environmental conditions in which individuals live.

Recenzijos

..a much admired and timely work; one that I found enjoyable, useful, and enriching. Theoretical Medicine and Bioethics

Daugiau informacijos

Exploring the interconnectedness of human health, biodiversity, and bioethics.
Preface xi
1 Global Bioethics and the Environment
1(18)
Bioethics
2(3)
Environment
5(2)
Global Bioethics
7(3)
Bioethics as Biomedical Ethics
10(3)
Environmental Ethics
13(3)
Reconnecting Biomedical and Environmental Ethics
16(1)
Conclusion
17(2)
2 Biodiversity
19(25)
Biodiversity: A New Focus
20(1)
Environmentalism
20(3)
Popularity of Biodiversity
23(3)
Biodiversity and Bioeconomics
26(1)
From Environment to Biodiversity
27(2)
Values and Ethics
29(6)
Broader Bioethics: The Need for Different Ethical Discourse
35(5)
Conclusion
40(4)
3 Health
44(30)
Health and Environment
45(2)
Health and Biodiversity
47(2)
What Is New?
49(1)
Global Health
50(2)
Relational Context
52(4)
Governance
56(2)
Ethical Implications
58(3)
A Different Normative Grammar
61(7)
The Lesson from Biodiversity and Health
68(3)
Relational and Inclusive Ethics
71(1)
Conclusion
72(2)
4 Disease
74(37)
Bioinvasion
75(5)
Infectious Diseases
80(13)
Biosecurity
93(8)
Noncommunicable Diseases
101(7)
Conclusion
108(3)
5 Drugs
111(2)
Gifts of Nature
113(5)
Traditional Medicine
118(5)
Comprehensive Global Medicine
123(2)
Global Inequality and Injustice
125(8)
Global Bioethics Policies
133(2)
An Ethical Assessment
135(7)
An Unfair System
142(1)
Conclusion
143(3)
6 Food
146(39)
Agriculture and Ethics
147(1)
Food Security
148(2)
Protecting Biodiversity
150(2)
Human Health and Food
152(3)
Different Ways of Producing Food
155(5)
Food Regimes
160(1)
Food Consumption
161(5)
Ethics and Food
166(8)
Global Bioethics: Going to the Roots
174(8)
Conclusion
182(3)
7 Water
185(38)
Water Crisis
187(3)
Water Ethics
190(5)
Water Security
195(3)
Water as Commons
198(7)
Right to Water
205(4)
Water Justice
209(3)
Water Governance
212(8)
Conclusion
220(3)
8 Global Bioethics in Practice
223(52)
Individual and Social Ethics
226(3)
Global Bioethics
229(3)
Globalization
232(5)
Inequality
237(4)
Criticizing the Roots of Problems
241(2)
The Fundamental Challenge of Climate Change
243(4)
Commons
247(5)
Justice
252(7)
Global Bioethics Practices
259(2)
Governance
261(3)
Framing
264(2)
Awareness Raising
266(1)
Advocacy
267(3)
Grassroots Activities
270(2)
Conclusion
272(3)
Notes 275(70)
Index 345
Henk A.M.J. ten Have, MD, PhD, is a professor in the Center for Health Care Ethics at Duquesne University. He is the author of Global Bioethics: An Introduction and Vulnerability: Challenging Bioethics.