Please enable JavaScript.
Coggle requires JavaScript to display documents.
Chapter 5: Health Law, Policy, and Ethics - Coggle Diagram
Chapter 5: Health Law, Policy, and Ethics
scope
bioethics
-
Issues: Access, quality, cost, organizational structures, pandemics
-
Legal Principles
-
Rights
Derived from Constitutions, laws
-
-
Constitutional Law
Legislative statutes, Administrative regulations, Judicial laws
-
Health Policy
Policy Creation
By government or private groups (e.g., APHA, drug industry)
Policy Priorities
-
No centralized mechanism (e.g., Healthy People)
Law vs Policy
Policy: Authoritative decisions, may not be laws
Examples: Tobacco control, executive decisions
Law: Created by legislation, enforced by courts
-
Right to Health Care
Health Justice
.
-
-
U.S.: Not explicitly mentioned, can be interpreted
-
-
-
Bioethical Principles
-
Research Protections
-
Belmont Report: Respect for persons, Beneficence, Justice
-
Responding to Pandemics
Global Response
Historical context (International Sanitary Convention 1892, WHO 1948)
-
Core capacities, Public Health Emergency of International Concern (PHEIC)
Early detection, resilience, response
-
-
-
Calls to Action
Research Focus
Address health inequities and structural determinants, particularly racism
Increase Support
- For population and public health bioethics
- Career development for Scholars of Color
Funding and Training
More inclusive streams, training, review committee diversity
Pandemic Response
Global Perspective
Historical Context: International Sanitary Convention 1892, WHO 1948
-
-
Focus Areas: Early Detection, Resilience, Response