Power and Politics (1) Flashcards
What are the 4 pillars of ethics, according to Beauchamp and Childress’ taxonomy of medical ethics?
ethics - justifying what is right or wrong
Autonomy = freedom to act independently Non-malificience = do no harm Beneficience = do good Justice = fairness
Conventional: Autonomy, Non-Maleficence, Beneficence, Justice
However autonomy conflicts with some public health principles – sometimes health of wider population justifies overriding autonomy + rights of the individual
What is consequentialism?
Ethical validity of an action is based on the outcome of that action - e.g. a good outcome from an action that questions moral values is still considered ethically valid
What is utilitarianism?
- an ethical approach - branch of consequentialism
Argues that the ethical validity of an action is based on the outcome of the action
- Focuses on maximising human welfare/wellbeing
- The ethically right choice in a given situation is the one that produces the most happiness and the least unhappiness for the largest amount of people
- involves the so-called hedonic calculus
- It focuses more on ends rather than means
Jeremy Bentham (who also was the founder of UCL)
What is the issue with pure utilitarianism?
WASH (water, sanitation and hygiene) and vaccination programmes maximise human well-being
These are so effective, according to utilitarianism, there’s almost a reason to stop everything else and only put efforts into WASH and vaccines
(all money can not purely be spent on this alone)
- Issues: using this logic, cannot justify more economically costly areas of healthcare
What is the least cost-effective part of a hospital?
NICU
Neonatal intensive care unit - economically, these infants born preterm with major issues = costly to look after
Esp. because those saved often accumulate more care costs later on
What is the 2 axis approach of political beliefs
Two axis approach:
either Liberal → OR Conservative
AND either Libertarian → OR Collectivist
(depends on how much you think state should intervene)
- Libertarian – the state should not interfere with individual autonomy unless someone else is coming to harm
eg. Free markets, Capitalism - you believe that people make their own choices for good (or for ill).
- Collectivist – more egalitarian state of affairs - people are yielded equal opportunities + wealth is redistributed partially by progressive taxation/wholly by state action on salaries or company profits
- Marx, Lenin
What is distributive justice
- Active seeking and promoting equality
- Wealth redistribution/unconditional basic income
- Social justice – everyone in society deserves a chance
- -Today, is a pursuit of most centrist/leftist political parties in the democratic world
Categorise population health interventions using the Nuffield Ladder of Bioethics
Eliminate choice – e.g. compulsory isolation of patients with infectious disease
↑
Restrict choice – e.g. remove unhealthy ingredients from foods
↑
Guide choice through disincentives – e.g. taxes on cigarettes
↑
Guide choices through incentives – e.g. tax breaks for buying bikes for going o work
↑
Guide choices through changing the default policy – e.g. menus with healthier option as default
↑
Enable choice – e.g. free fruit in schools
↑
Provide information – e.g. 5 fruits and veg a day
↑
Do nothing/monitor the current situation
Deploy strategic thinking in specifying a policy objective and an approach to effecting change that recognises the implications of politics on health policy - who are the stakeholders and partners?
Effecting change – strategic/tactical thinking (strategic = aims = destination + Tactical = objectives = journey)
right message, right person, right time
(message - different approaches of influences)
- Stakeholders and partners
=Stakeholder = an organisation/individual with an interest
=Partner = subgroup of stakeholders who are central to the success of an aim
- Know who they are, if they are supportive, and what they can do
Solution = Coalition and collaboration = groups of stakeholders working together for a shared goal = compromise is key
difference between incremental change and transformative change in coalitions
- Incremental change – step by step, as slow as the slowest decision maker (default)
- Transformative change in root + branch, typically fast
define 1. power and 2. authority in terms if strategic thinking
- Power
The ability to exercise one’s will over others - Authority
The ability to influence people + outcomes
Medical profession based on authority more than power
What is social justice
“Society should treat all equally well who have deserved equally well of it…”
social justice: the idea that everyone should have their fair chance.
- Seeks to promote fairness in the allocation of resource
- Has become mainstream in western politics today
- Is important for decision-making in public health
What is the thought experiment of Plato’s shadows on the wall in his Allegory of the Cave
Plato’s Allegory of the Cave is a thought experiment from his book “The Republic” that examines the reality of perception and the need for empirical evidence.
2 definitions of politics
What we describe as Politics – with a big P – which relates to political parties and the philosophy of government. It’s driven by politicians – typically-elected, decision-makers who take countries forward.
But we also talk of politics – with a little p – as being that process of us gaining or applying power in our local group or organisation.
government role
- security
- to protect its citizens from external threats.
- to promote unity and fairness