What is enough? : sufficiency, justice, and health /
What is enough? : sufficiency, justice, and health /
edited by Carina Fourie and Annette Rid.
- Oxford ; New York : Oxford University Press, (c)2016.
- online resource
Includes bibliographies and index.
The sufficiency view : a primer / Sufficiency, health and health care justice : the state of the debate / Axiological sufficientarianism / Sufficiency, priority, and aggregation / Some questions (and answers) for sufficientarians / Essentially enough : elements of a plausible account of sufficientarianism / Intergenerational justice, sufficiency, and health / Basic human functional capabilities as the currency of sufficientarian distribution in healthcare / Disability, disease, and health sufficiency / Sufficiency of capabilities, social equality, and two-tiered health care systems / Determining a basic minimum of accessible health care : a comparative assessment of the well-being sufficiency approach / Just caring : the insufficiency of the sufficiency principle in health care / Defining health care benefit packages : how sufficientarian is current practice? / Sufficiency, comprehensiveness of healthcare coverage, and cost-sharing arrangements in the realpolitik of health policy / Applying the capability approach in health economic evaluations : a sufficient solution / Carina Fourie -- Annette Rid -- Iwao Hirose -- Robert Huseby -- Liam Shields -- David V. Axelsen and Lasse Nielsen -- Axel Gosseries -- Efrat Ram-Tiktin -- Sean Aas and David Wasserman -- Carina Fourie -- Paul T. Menzel -- Leonard M. Fleck -- Dimitra Panteli and Ewout van Ginneken -- Govind Persad and Harald Schmidt -- Paul Mark Mitchell, Tracy E. Roberts, Pelham M. Barton, and Joanna Coast.
Sufficientarian approaches maintain that justice should aim for each person to have ""enough"". But what is sufficiency? What does it imply for health or health care justice? In this volume, philosophers, bioethicists, health policy-makers, and health economists assess sufficiency and its application to health and health care in fifteen original contributions.
9780199385294 9780199385287
Health Care Rationing--ethics.
Health Care Rationing--economics.
Health Services Needs and Demand.
Social Justice.
Health Policy.
Health care rationing--Economic aspects.
Health care rationing--Moral and ethical aspects.
Medical policy.
Social justice.
Electronic Books.
RA418 / .W438 2016
Includes bibliographies and index.
The sufficiency view : a primer / Sufficiency, health and health care justice : the state of the debate / Axiological sufficientarianism / Sufficiency, priority, and aggregation / Some questions (and answers) for sufficientarians / Essentially enough : elements of a plausible account of sufficientarianism / Intergenerational justice, sufficiency, and health / Basic human functional capabilities as the currency of sufficientarian distribution in healthcare / Disability, disease, and health sufficiency / Sufficiency of capabilities, social equality, and two-tiered health care systems / Determining a basic minimum of accessible health care : a comparative assessment of the well-being sufficiency approach / Just caring : the insufficiency of the sufficiency principle in health care / Defining health care benefit packages : how sufficientarian is current practice? / Sufficiency, comprehensiveness of healthcare coverage, and cost-sharing arrangements in the realpolitik of health policy / Applying the capability approach in health economic evaluations : a sufficient solution / Carina Fourie -- Annette Rid -- Iwao Hirose -- Robert Huseby -- Liam Shields -- David V. Axelsen and Lasse Nielsen -- Axel Gosseries -- Efrat Ram-Tiktin -- Sean Aas and David Wasserman -- Carina Fourie -- Paul T. Menzel -- Leonard M. Fleck -- Dimitra Panteli and Ewout van Ginneken -- Govind Persad and Harald Schmidt -- Paul Mark Mitchell, Tracy E. Roberts, Pelham M. Barton, and Joanna Coast.
Sufficientarian approaches maintain that justice should aim for each person to have ""enough"". But what is sufficiency? What does it imply for health or health care justice? In this volume, philosophers, bioethicists, health policy-makers, and health economists assess sufficiency and its application to health and health care in fifteen original contributions.
9780199385294 9780199385287
Health Care Rationing--ethics.
Health Care Rationing--economics.
Health Services Needs and Demand.
Social Justice.
Health Policy.
Health care rationing--Economic aspects.
Health care rationing--Moral and ethical aspects.
Medical policy.
Social justice.
Electronic Books.
RA418 / .W438 2016