학술논문

“First, Do No Harm”? Non-Maleficence, Population Health, and the Ethics of Risk.
Document Type
Article
Source
Social Theory & Practice. Jul2022, Vol. 48 Issue 3, p525-551. 27p.
Subject
*POPULATION health
*PARETO principle
*MEDICAL screening
*ETHICS
*MEDICAL ethics
*PUBLIC health ethics
Language
ISSN
0037-802X
Abstract
Screening for asymptomatic disease is a routine aspect of contemporary public health practice. However, it is also controversial, because it leads to overdiagnosis and overtreatment, with many arguing that programmes are “ineffective,” i.e., the “costs” outweigh the “benefits.” This paper explores a more fundamental objection to screening programmes: that, even if they are effective, they are ethically impermissible because they breach the principle of non-maleficence. In so doing, it suggests a new approach to the ethics of risk, justifying a concern with how policies affect individuals’ absolute ex-ante prospects. Part 1 sets up the tension between screening and non-maleficence. Part 2 introduces and motivates a novel interpretation of the non-maleficence principle, “ex-ante Do No Harm,” which resolves this tension. Part 3 defends and clarifies this principle by discussing its relationship to the ex-ante Pareto principle. Part 4 discusses the worry that risk estimates are too “subjective.” [ABSTRACT FROM AUTHOR]