Ethical failures of the COVID-19 pandemic response / / Péter Marton |
Autore | Marton Péter <1979-> |
Pubbl/distr/stampa | Cham, Switzerland : , : Springer International Publishing, , [2022] |
Descrizione fisica | 1 online resource (xvii, 279 pages) : illustrations |
Disciplina | 362.1962414 |
Soggetto topico |
COVID-19 Pandemic, 2020- - Moral and ethical aspects
Public health - Moral and ethical aspects |
ISBN |
9783031091940
3031091949 9783031091933 3031091930 |
Formato | Materiale a stampa |
Livello bibliografico | Monografia |
Lingua di pubblicazione | eng |
Nota di contenuto |
Intro -- Preface -- Acknowledgments -- Contents -- Acronyms -- List of Figures -- List of Tables -- Chapter 1: Introduction and Analytic Framework -- Introduction -- At Stake: Assessing the Response to a Truly Deadly Pandemic -- The Focus on Decisions as Part of the Social Determinants of Health -- Towards a Normative Ethics of Pandemic Response -- Research Questions and the Structure of the Book -- A Context Where Countries Are Not Really Cases -- Timeframe -- Conclusion -- References -- Part I: War on Paper -- Chapter 2: Ethics in Governance: Pandemic Response as a Vital Interest -- Introduction -- Ethics and Strategic Political Decisions: Introducing the SURVIS Framework -- Boundary Parameter #1: Polity Survival -- Boundary Parameter #2: The Preservation of Vital Interests -- Boundary Parameter #3: Maintaining the Provision of Public Services at Adequate Levels -- Boundary Parameter #4: Policy Survival -- In Summary of the Above -- The Place of Public Health and Pandemic Response in the SURVIS Framework -- The Ethics of Ethical Foreign Policy -- How Other Policy Areas Differ, with Special Regard to Pandemic Response -- Conclusion -- References -- Chapter 3: The Ethics of Response to Plague on Distant Shores -- Introduction -- Is International Response to Infectious Disease Outbreaks Always Warranted? -- Response to the West African Ebola Virus Epidemic of 2013-2016 -- Is International Response to Infectious Disease Outbreaks Always the Most Effective? -- The Response to Neglected Tropical Diseases -- The Necessity of a Global Response to the SARS-CoV-2 Pandemic -- Conclusion -- Chapter 4: The Ethics of Practices in Pandemic Response -- Introduction -- The Field of Public Health Ethics -- Public Health Ethics and the Norms of Pandemic Response -- An Integrated Set of Normative Guidelines for Pandemic Response -- Discussion -- Conclusion.
References -- Part II: Friction -- Chapter 5: The Need/Failure to Prepare and Prevent -- Introduction -- Pandemic Insurance -- Planning -- Exercises -- Stockpiling -- Institutional Adaptation -- Prevention -- The Need to Cooperate Internationally and Globally -- The Need to Inquire, Learn and Adapt -- Conclusion -- References -- Chapter 6: The Need/Failure to Anticipate and Pre-empt -- Introduction -- Outbreak and Response in the People's Republic of China -- The Worldwide Failure to Anticipate the Crisis and Cooperate Globally -- The Failure to Inquire, Learn and Adapt -- Conclusion -- References -- Chapter 7: The Need/Failure to React, Adequately Prioritise and Persevere -- Introduction -- Not Reacting in a Timely Manner -- Priorities Misplaced, Precaution Ignored -- The Failure to Prioritise Disease Prevention -- Social Equity Ignored -- The Failure to Set Goals in International Cooperation -- The Failure to Learn -- Conclusion -- References -- Chapter 8: The Need/Failure to Honestly Account and Take Responsibility -- Introduction -- The Failure to Honestly Account -- The Failure to Take Responsibility -- The Failure to Learn and the Failure to Cooperate Internationally -- Conclusion -- References -- Chapter 9: Lessons, Recommendations, Conclusion -- Introduction -- IDLE: The Cognitive Anatomy of Dysfunctional Decision-Making -- The Contrast Down Under -- The Failures of Pandemic Response in Hungary -- The Price and Ethical Significance of Failure -- Recommendations -- Conclusion -- References -- References -- Index. |
Record Nr. | UNINA-9910634045003321 |
Marton Péter <1979-> | ||
Cham, Switzerland : , : Springer International Publishing, , [2022] | ||
Materiale a stampa | ||
Lo trovi qui: Univ. Federico II | ||
|
Ethical Implications of COVID-19 Management : Evaluating the Aftershock |
Autore | Patton Cheryl |
Edizione | [1st ed.] |
Pubbl/distr/stampa | Ethics International Press, 2022 |
Descrizione fisica | 1 online resource (374 pages) |
Altri autori (Persone) | EgelEleftheria |
Soggetto topico |
COVID-19 Pandemic, 2020- - Moral and ethical aspects
COVID-19 Pandemic, 2020- - Government policy - Moral and ethical aspects COVID-19 (Disease) - Prevention - Government policy - Moral and ethical aspects Emergency management - Moral and ethical aspects Health services administration - Moral and ethical aspects Public health administration - Moral and ethical aspects Ethics |
ISBN | 1-80441-081-0 |
Formato | Materiale a stampa |
Livello bibliografico | Monografia |
Lingua di pubblicazione | eng |
Nota di contenuto |
Praise for Ethical Implications of COVID-19 Management: Evaluating the Aftershock and The COVID-19 Pandemic: Ethical Challenges and Considerations -- Introduction -- References -- About the Editors -- PART ONE Disruption is the New Normal -- Ethical Management in These Unprecedented Times: COVID-19, Gender, Remote Work, and the Search for Employee Work-Life Balance -- COVID-19's Immediate Workplace Impact -- The Sudden Shift to Flexibility -- Organizational Issues -- Considerations for a Flexible Future -- Gender Dynamics -- Moving Forward Ethically -- Practical Solutions for a Flexible Framework -- Conclusion -- References -- COVID-19 School Closures and the Flourishing of Our Children -- Loss of Learning -- Food Insecurity -- Child Health and Physical Fitness -- Child Safety -- Social Development -- Conclusion -- References -- Finding Good Work in COVID-19: Legal and Ethical Challenges for Sustainability -- Legal issues and ethical conundrums from COVID-19 -- The Individual and "Good Work" -- Conclusion -- References -- The Impact of the COVID-19 Pandemic on Individuals and Their Intra- and Intergroup Relations -- Introduction -- The COVID-19 pandemic and its consequences at the individual level -- The COVID-19 pandemic and intragroup relations -- The negative effect of COVID-19 pandemic on intra-group relations -- The positive effect of COVID-19 pandemic on intra-group relations -- Institutional trust and compliance with COVID-19 health recommendations -- The COVID-19 pandemic and intergroup relations -- Practical implications -- Conclusion -- References -- COVID-19 and the Ethics of Grief and Loss -- The Choices of Grief -- COVID-19's Shadow: Grief and Loss -- A Litany of Loss: Grief Upon Grief -- Loss of Self Concept -- Loss of Community -- Loss of Financial Resources -- Loss of Autonomy and Plans -- Loss of Life -- Loss of Grieving Rituals.
Future Losses and Impact of Loss -- The Ethics of Grief and Loss Amidst COVID-19: Leadership Challenges -- Evaluating the Past -- Looking Ahead: What Does it Mean to Value a Human Life? -- Constructive Solutions: Employing an Ethic of Care -- What is Ethics of Care? -- Caring as Truth-Telling -- Caring as Hopefulness -- Caring as Transformative Joy -- Closing Remarks: Bitter, Better, or Beyond? -- References -- PART TWO Social (in)justice -- Value-Based Integrated Care: The Foundations of a Global Health Ethical Approach to Improving COVID-19 Vaccination Readiness in Low-and-Middle-Income Countries -- Introduction: Vaccine distribution problems in Low-and-Middle-Income Countries -- Suffering, Vulnerability and negative ethics -- Suffering as a negative moral value -- The suffering of unsatisfied basic needs -- The normative basis: suffering-based preference utilitarianism -- Value-Based-Healthcare: Incentives as tools and institutions as addressees of global health ethics -- Value-Based-Healthcare: The Concept of Porter and Teisberg -- Pay-for-Performance schemes in the healthcare sector -- Value Based-Healthcare and integrated care - practical perspectives to improving COVID-19 vaccination readiness in LMICs -- Availability issues -- Access issues -- Information issues -- 5. Findings and Recommendation -- References -- Equitable Allocation, Distribution, and Uptake of Vaccines for COVID-19: Mitigation of Health Inequities -- Introduction: Health Disparities and Inequities in the Pandemic -- Frameworks for Equitable Allocation and Distribution of COVID-19 Vaccines -- Principles in Different Frameworks of Allocation of COVID-19 Vaccine -- Equity as a Cross-cutting Consideration in COVID-19 Vaccine Allocation and Distribution -- From Vaccine Allocation and Distribution to Vaccination: Ensuring Uptake -- Removing barriers to access. Overcoming mistrust and distrust -- Providing monetary and other incentive rewards -- Conclusion -- References -- The Governance Ethical Challenge During the COVID-19 Pandemic in Developing Countries -- Introduction -- The State Capture and its influence on ethical behavior -- Ethics in the Public Procurement -- The Dilapidated Health Sector and its Impact on Equity Healthcare Access -- The Ethical Problems in Social Cash Transfer Program -- Vaccine Access and Distribution Ethics -- Reflection and Discussion on Public Governance Ethics -- Conclusion -- References -- The Ethics of Resource Distribution in the COVID-19 Pandemic -- Existing disparities in the delivery of medical care and ethical challenges -- COVID-19 pandemic exacerbated disparities in healthcare delivery and challenges ethical principles -- Masks -- Hospitals -- Geographic factors -- Monoclonal antibodies -- Antiviral therapies -- Vaccines -- Ethical principles for more equal distribution of resources -- Public health planning -- Models for ethical distribution of resources -- Conclusion -- References -- PART THREE Suppression Measures: Costs and Benefits -- Risk, Proportionality and Necessity: An Evidence-Based Critique of COVID-19 Pandemic Management Strategies -- Lockdown Outcomes -- Vaccination Mandate Outcomes -- Risk, Proportionality, and Necessity -- Conclusion -- References -- Force is in the Eye of the Beholder: An Australian Case Study -- Introduction -- The Policy -- The Prevalence of the Policy Framework -- What is 'Force'? -- Conclusion -- References -- Is Temperature Screening an Ethical and Valuable Restriction on Privacy and Freedom? -- Is temperature screening a public health necessity? -- Limitations of Temperature Testing -- Liberty and Surveillance: Must it be a Necessity to be Ethically Justifiable? -- Context: Early Pandemic Spring 2020. Private Action in the Absence of Government Mandates in the Early Pandemic -- Privacy in public temperature screening -- An ethical lapse: the failure to record data that could improve public health and the economy -- Ethical baseline: notice and informed consent -- Conclusion -- References -- Ethical Questions in Pandemic Response: Does School Closure Save Lives or Crush Lives? -- Introduction -- Fear for children, and a common myth -- Comparison with other risks -- A common myth -- Did third-wave concern have a basis? -- Is paediatric COVID-19 case-count meaningful? Is zero-COVID-19 possible? -- Fear of children: are schools super-spreaders? -- Does school closure help reduce hospitalization? -- Does case-counting serve a useful purpose? -- Is fear of children natural or ethical? -- Did India follow scientific evidence? -- What are the costs of school closure? -- Are COVID-19-19 jabs necessary for children? -- Conclusion -- References -- PART FOUR Business and Economy -- Acts of Congress and COVID-19: A Literature Review on the Impact of Increased Unemployment Insurance Benefits and Stimulus Checks -- Introduction -- Unemployment Insurance Benefits -- Stimulus Checks -- Conclusion -- References -- Ethical Considerations of Business CSR During the COVID-19 Pandemic -- Introduction -- Instrumental, Deontological, and Virtue Motives for Ethical Actions -- Ethics-Driven Examples of Business CSR Activities -- Philanthropic Responses -- Transformational Responses -- Employee Care Responses -- Analysis and Conclusion -- References -- Two Contrasting Ethical Perspectives on Leadership and the COVID-19 "Return to Work" Dilemma: Kant's Categorical Imperative and Gilligan's Ethic of Care -- Introduction -- The "Return to Work" Ethical Dilemma and Leadership -- Kant's Categorical Imperative -- Gilligan's Ethic of Care. "Return to Work" Examples During the COVID-19 Pandemic -- Resolving the Ethical Dilemma -- Conclusion -- References -- Empathetic or Destructive? - Impact of Leadership Behavior During a Pandemic and Ethics of Care -- Introduction -- The Complex Interaction Between Leadership and Crisis Management -- Employee Retention in the COVID-19 Crisis -- Destructive Leadership and Ethics of Care in a Crisis -- Empathetic Leadership and Ethics of Care in a Crisis -- Implications for Practice and Future Research -- Conclusion -- References -- Contributor biographies. |
Record Nr. | UNINA-9910839301103321 |
Patton Cheryl | ||
Ethics International Press, 2022 | ||
Materiale a stampa | ||
Lo trovi qui: Univ. Federico II | ||
|
The global and social consequences of the COVID-19 pandemic : an ethical and philosophical reflection / / Gottfried Schweiger, editor |
Pubbl/distr/stampa | Cham, Switzerland : , : Springer, , [2022] |
Descrizione fisica | 1 online resource (338 pages) |
Disciplina | 616.2414 |
Collana | Studies in global justice |
Soggetto topico |
COVID-19 Pandemic, 2020-
COVID-19 Pandemic, 2020- - Philosophy COVID-19 Pandemic, 2020- - Moral and ethical aspects |
ISBN |
9783030979829
9783030979812 |
Formato | Materiale a stampa |
Livello bibliografico | Monografia |
Lingua di pubblicazione | eng |
Nota di contenuto |
Intro -- Contents -- About the Editor and Contributors -- About the Editor -- About the Conributors -- Chapter 1: Introduction: The Global and Social Consequences of the COVID-19 Pandemic - Ethical and Philosophical Reflections -- 1.1 Introduction -- 1.2 Vulnerability and the Pandemic -- 1.3 Social, Economic and Political Consequences After the COVID 19 Pandemic -- 1.4 Global Crisis, Global Justice -- 1.5 About the Chapters in This Book -- References -- Part I: Reflections on Pandemic Policies -- Chapter 2: The COVID-19 Pandemic as a Severe Scarcity Condition: Testing the Tenacity of Ideal Theories of Justice -- 2.1 The COVID-19 Pandemic: First Impressions -- 2.2 Circumstances of Justice and Conditions of Scarcity -- 2.3 Scarcity Conditions and Their Implications for Inner Conditions -- 2.4 Moral Considerations and the Scope of Justice -- References -- Chapter 3: Ethical Responses to COVID Pandemic: Compassion, Solidarity, and Justice -- 3.1 Introduction -- 3.2 Virtue Ethics -- 3.3 Applying Three Core Virtues -- 3.3.1 Compassion -- 3.3.2 Solidarity -- 3.3.3 Justice -- 3.4 Discussion and Implications -- References -- Chapter 4: COVID-19 and Intergenerational Justice: The Case of Denmark -- 4.1 Introduction -- 4.2 Precaution and Prioritization of Risks -- 4.3 Did the Lockdown Policies Lead to More Lives Being Saved and to More Health Overall? -- 4.4 Short- and Long-Term Effects of School Closures -- 4.5 COVID-19 and Intergenerational Injustice -- 4.6 Conclusion -- References -- Chapter 5: Pandemic, Democracy, and Freedom -- 5.1 Introduction -- 5.2 Worries About the State of Democracy -- 5.3 Deliberative Democracy and the Centrality of Freedom -- 5.4 Disproportionate Effects of COVID-19 -- 5.5 The COVID-19 Pandemic as a Disclosure of Deficiencies of Democracy -- 5.6 Conclusion -- References -- Part II: Reflections on Work and Economy.
Chapter 6: The Sounds of Silence: Inequality after Covid-19, Missing Justifications, and Three Scenarios for a Post-Covid Political Economy -- 6.1 Introduction -- 6.2 The Return of the State? -- 6.3 Economic Effects of the Crisis -- 6.4 Whence the Rising Inequalities? Path Dependency -- 6.5 Dynamics of the Narrative of "Justification" -- 6.6 How "Political" Is the Rising Inequality? -- 6.7 Corona and the Missing Legitimations: The Narrative of Silence -- References -- Chapter 7: Relationalities of Precarity and Invisibility: Reflections on the Vulnerability of the Informal Workforce in India in the Context of the Covid-19 Pandemic -- 7.1 Introduction -- 7.2 Precarious Labour and Invisible Bodies -- 7.3 The Informal Workforce in India and the Covid-19 Pandemic -- 7.4 Social Invisibility and the Precariousness of Existence -- 7.5 Conclusion -- References -- Chapter 8: Recognition, Employment and the Social Crisis in Times of COVID-19 and Beyond -- 8.1 Introduction -- 8.2 Recognition and Employment -- 8.3 Recognition, Money and the "Everyday Heroes" -- 8.4 Recognition, Unemployment and Consequences of the COVID-19 Pandemic -- 8.5 Conflicts, Struggles for Recognition and Solutions that Benefit Everyone -- 8.6 Conclusion -- References -- Chapter 9: COVID-19 and Social Injustice -- 9.1 Introduction -- 9.2 Misfortune Vs. Injustice -- 9.3 What Is Social Injustice? -- 9.4 The Global Injustice of COVID-19: Poverty -- 9.5 The Global Injustice of COVID-19: Vulnerable Groups -- 9.6 The Global Injustice of COVID-19: Ethnic Minorities -- 9.7 The Way Forward -- 9.8 Conclusion -- References -- Part III: Reflections on the Situation of Women, Families and Children -- Chapter 10: COVID-19, Care Ethics, and Vulnerability -- 10.1 COVID-19: Responses and Trade-Offs -- 10.2 Units of Moral Concern -- 10.3 What I Talk About When I Talk About Care -- 10.4 Care Ethics. 10.5 Universal Policies and Individual Actions -- 10.6 Autonomy, Variation in Values, and Making People Change -- 10.7 Conclusion -- References -- Chapter 11: So Close, So Far: Sexual and Reproductive Rights in the COVID-19 Era -- 11.1 Sexual and Reproductive Rights in Times of Pandemic: A Luxury or a Right? -- 11.2 Theoretical Framework: Intersectionality and Obstetric Violence in Syndemic -- 11.3 Abortion in Times of Coronavirus -- 11.4 Childbirth and Lactation in Times of Coronavirus -- 11.5 Conclusions: COVID-19 as an Opportunity to Improve Sexual and Reproductive Rights -- References -- Chapter 12: The Rights of Children of Prisoners During a Pandemic: A Case for Early Release of Imprisoned Parents? -- 12.1 Introduction -- 12.2 The Harms of Parental Imprisonment -- 12.3 The Consequences of the Covid-19 Pandemic for the Children and Families of Prisoners -- 12.4 The Case for Early-Release of Imprisoned Parents -- 12.5 Conclusion -- References -- Chapter 13: Meeting the Educational Needs of Every Child - A Malaysian Perspective -- 13.1 Introduction -- 13.2 Overview of Education in Malaysia -- 13.3 The Malaysian Context -- 13.4 Learning During and After COVID-19 -- 13.5 Discussion -- 13.6 Reflection -- References -- Chapter 14: Family in Crisis? Family Models as an Ethical-Theological Challenge -- 14.1 Introduction -- 14.2 Family as a Way of Life -- 14.3 Family as a Place of Refuge -- 14.4 Family as a Trouble Spot -- 14.5 Family as a Phenomenon -- 14.6 Family as a Model -- 14.7 Family as an Opportunity -- References -- Part IV: Reflections on Migration -- Chapter 15: Principles of Ethical Recruitment of Global Nurses in a Bilateral Labor Agreement - A Rawlsian Contract Approach -- 15.1 Introduction -- 15.2 A Rawlsian Contract Approach to Bilateral Labor Agreement -- 15.3 The Principle of Equal Liberty -- 15.4 Principle on Democratic Equality. 15.5 The Principle of Fair Equality of Opportunity -- 15.5.1 Fair Remuneration of Work -- 15.5.2 Health and Other Social Protection Support -- 15.6 Fair Recruitment Model -- 15.7 Joint Monitoring and Reporting Mechanism -- 15.8 The Difference Principle -- 15.9 Feasibility Test of BLAs in the Midst of Pandemic -- References -- Chapter 16: Power, Vulnerability, and the Effects of COVID-19 on Migrants Held by the Detention Industry in the United States -- 16.1 Introduction -- 16.2 Challenges to the Human Rights of Migrants Held by the Detention Industry -- 16.2.1 International Legal Standards on the Protection of the Human Rights of Migrants Deprived of Liberty and the Criminalization of Migration -- 16.2.2 The Migrant Detention Industry -- 16.2.3 The Cruel Pedagogy of the Virus -- 16.3 Vulnerability: A Framework to Understand the Injustices Faced by Migrants Held by the Detention Industry in Times of COVID-19? -- 16.3.1 The Concept of Vulnerability and Injustices Faced by Migrants Deprived of Liberty -- 16.3.2 Hegemonic Conceptions on the Subordination of the Other: People on the Move and Forced Immobility in Times of COVID-19 -- 16.4 Conclusion -- References -- Chapter 17: Filling the Gaps: Policy Mismatches, Community Responses, and Refugee Livelihoods During a Global Pandemic -- 17.1 Introduction -- 17.2 Policy: National- and State-Level Structures of Social Protections -- 17.3 Community: Refugee Women's Livelihoods During a Global Pandemic -- 17.4 Gaps: Mismatches Between Policy and Lived Experiences -- 17.5 Livelihoods: Outlooks Beyond the Pandemic -- 17.6 Conclusion -- References -- Part V: Epilogue -- Chapter 18: Epilogue: Reflections -- Chapter 19: Addendum: October 2021 -- References -- Chapter 20: Democracy, Indifference and COVID-19 -- Reference -- Chapter 21: Returning to Reflect the State of Democracy During an Extended Pandemic. Chapter 22: Vaccine Inequality as Injustice: Undocumented Migrants and Access to Vaccination in the European Union -- References -- Chapter 23: Is Vaccine Hoarding a Type of Violence? -- References -- Chapter 24: Epilogue: The View from Malaysia -- References -- Chapter 25: The Pandemic as a Test Case: Bilateral Labor Agreements -- Chapter 26: Reflections on Migrants in Privatized Detention in the United States and the Effects of COVID-19 Pandemic -- References. |
Record Nr. | UNINA-9910739436703321 |
Cham, Switzerland : , : Springer, , [2022] | ||
Materiale a stampa | ||
Lo trovi qui: Univ. Federico II | ||
|