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1.
Hastings Cent Rep ; 54(3): 59, 2024 May.
Article in English | MEDLINE | ID: mdl-38842909

ABSTRACT

This letter responds to the essay "Digital Humans to Combat Loneliness and Social Isolation: Ethics Concerns and Policy Recommendation," by Nancy S. Jecker, Robert Sparrow, Zohar Lederman, and Anita Ho, in the January-February 2024 issue of the Hastings Center Report.


Subject(s)
Loneliness , Humans , Africa , Social Isolation , Colonialism , Digital Technology
3.
J Med Ethics ; 50(3): 219-220, 2024 Feb 20.
Article in English | MEDLINE | ID: mdl-37451857

Subject(s)
Ethics, Medical , Humans
5.
7.
Dev World Bioeth ; 2023 Sep 25.
Article in English | MEDLINE | ID: mdl-37749945

ABSTRACT

Current studies of anti/-natalism have been carried out mainly in the context of western philosophy. In this article, we offer a pro-natalist view based on Confucian and Afro-communitarian philosophy (Sino-African ethics). Grounded in this Sino-African perspective, we uphold that there is, at least, one reason to believe that not only is it morally permissible to procreate, but also that on some occasions, procreating is what morality prescribes. Specifically, we contend that, from a Sino-African perspective, procreating sometimes is the best way to fulfil duties of reciprocity and care towards our parents.

8.
Dev World Bioeth ; 2023 Aug 02.
Article in English | MEDLINE | ID: mdl-37531081

ABSTRACT

In Africa, homosexuality is routinely understood as a form of immoral behaviour. This has great implications for the physical and psychological well-being of homosexuals in Africa. One of the reasons why homosexuals are sometimes understood to be behaving immorally is because it is believed that same-sex relations are unnatural. I think that this conception of unnatural is grounded on the perverted faculty argument, although this is not often expressed in such terms. In this article, I will develop a concept of natural grounded on the concept of Ukama. I will show that despite Ukama implying a functional conception of nature, just like in the perverted faculty argument, it does not imply that homosexuality is immoral.

9.
Med Health Care Philos ; 26(4): 573-581, 2023 Dec.
Article in English | MEDLINE | ID: mdl-37479910

ABSTRACT

Although some have argued that COVID-19 vaccine patents are morally justified, a broader argument on the morality of breaching contracts is necessary. This article explores the ethics of breaching unfair contracts and argues that it is morally justified to breach contracts with pharmaceutical companies concerning vaccine patents. I offer two arguments to support this view. Firstly, contracts may be breachable in some situations. The ones I point out are that contracts can be broken when the costs of not violating vaccine patents are too high or when the process for agreement is not fair, or when an urgent ethical issue needs to be addressed and it is possible to compensate the other party for their loss. Secondly, I argue that because the contracts with the pharmaceutical companies do not treat people as ends in themselves, there is no moral obligation to respect them.


Subject(s)
COVID-19 Vaccines , Social Justice , Humans , Morals , Moral Obligations , Pharmaceutical Preparations , Contracts
10.
Dev World Bioeth ; 23(4): 331-343, 2023 Dec.
Article in English | MEDLINE | ID: mdl-36256961

ABSTRACT

There are concerns that participation in open science will lead to various forms of exploitation - of researchers and scholars in low-income countries and under-resourced institutions. This article defends a contrary thesis and demonstrates the exact ways the underexplored notions of communal relationships, human dignity and social justice - and the normative principles to which they give rise - grounded in African philosophy can usefully address critical concerns regarding exploitation in the sharing of research resources to facilitate open partnership/collaboration and reuse. Further research is required to study the specific roles different institutions can play in facilitating open practice and contribute towards establishing effective structures that can enhance equity and balance unfavourable power asymmetries.


Subject(s)
Health Resources , Social Justice , Humans , Research Personnel
11.
Indian J Med Ethics ; VII(4): 315-320, 2022.
Article in English | MEDLINE | ID: mdl-36398396

ABSTRACT

Religious beliefs may significantly impact the effectiveness of health policies. In this article, I analyse how Christian theistic beliefs about evil and suffering, in connection with belief in the afterlife, have unreasonable ethical implications in the context of African epistemologies. Further, I contend that such Christian theistic beliefs have a negative impact on health policies, especially during the current pandemic. They prescribe one-size-fits-all approaches, which neglect contextual issues in addressing the pandemic. They also encourage passivity and neglect in the face of suffering. I then offer an alternative inspired by Afro-communitarianism, which I argue is convincing. Given that the theistic view is morally indefensible, I contend that it cannot be a good explanation of the problem of evil.


Subject(s)
Christianity , Public Health , Humans , Morals , Social Responsibility , Africa
12.
Philos Ethics Humanit Med ; 17(1): 12, 2022 09 28.
Article in English | MEDLINE | ID: mdl-36175911

ABSTRACT

With the current pandemic, many scholars have contended that clinical criteria offer the best way to implement triage. Further, they dismiss the criteria of social value as a good one for triage. In this paper, I respond to refute this perspective. In particular, I present two sets of arguments. Firstly, I argue that the objections to the social value criteria they present apply to the clinical criteria they favor. Secondly, they exaggerate the negative aspects of the social value criteria, while I suggest it is reasonable to use this. I end the article by recommending how operative public values can be a good way to make triaging decisions.


Subject(s)
Social Values , Triage , Delivery of Health Care , Health Facilities , Pandemics
13.
Bioethics ; 36(3): 243-251, 2022 03.
Article in English | MEDLINE | ID: mdl-35118702

ABSTRACT

Consequentialist life-maximizing approaches to triaging prescribe that everyone ought to have an equal chance of living a typical lifespan, through the saving more life-years (or saving most lives) principle, which emphasizes the youngest-first principle and in some cases a lottery approach, often at the expense of the old and the sick. Although this approach has already been criticized by several bioethicists, this article provides a different kind of criticism to the life-cycle viewpoint, one that has not yet been explored at length; namely, we contend that the life-maximizing approach entails a form of racism without racists in its attitude towards Black people. More specifically, we contend that by neglecting the idea that current societies are not post-racial, it privileges White individuals and disadvantages Black people in the triaging process, curtails equal opportunities for Black people, reinforces white normativity, and neglects African culture. We end the article by pointing towards an Afro-communitarian relational triaging approach that does not face the same difficulties as consequentialist life-maximizing approaches do.


Subject(s)
Racism , Black or African American , Attitude , Ethical Theory , Humans , Triage
14.
15.
J Bioeth Inq ; 18(3): 511-523, 2021 09.
Article in English | MEDLINE | ID: mdl-34224099

ABSTRACT

Animal advocates world-wide have been accused of campaigns immured in racism. Some authors have argued that for animal advocates to avoid this accusation they should simultaneously engage with racial discrimination issues when advocating for animal welfare/rights. This prescription has been mostly explored in the context of the Global North and by looking at Western normative theory. In this article I address this issue but by looking at the context of South Africa and analysing the prescriptions from an Afro-communitarian ethic. I conclude that this ethic prescribes that there is a positive duty to engage in racial discrimination issues and, if one does not do so, a violation of some negative duties occurs.


Subject(s)
Racial Groups , Racism , Animals , Humans , Politics , Social Responsibility , South Africa
17.
Bioethics ; 35(4): 385-387, 2021 05.
Article in English | MEDLINE | ID: mdl-33751606

ABSTRACT

This case study analysis looks at Portuguese policy during the COVID-19 pandemic whereby convicts were freed for the sake of public health. I defend this policy negatively by refuting the argument that suggested it involved various forms of injustice.


Subject(s)
COVID-19/prevention & control , Freedom , Policy , Prisoners/legislation & jurisprudence , Public Health/ethics , Humans , Portugal/epidemiology , SARS-CoV-2
18.
J Bioeth Inq ; 17(4): 669-674, 2020 Dec.
Article in English | MEDLINE | ID: mdl-33169259

ABSTRACT

The COVID-19 pandemic requires emergency policies to be put in place in order to avoid a global health catastrophe. At the same time, there has been an increasing preoccupation that argues urgent policies for public health neglect social justice. By looking at Portugal's successful confinement case during the early stages of the pandemic, I argue that ethically driven social justice policies are not just compatible but also an instrumentally important element in addressing this pandemic in an effective way. The Portuguese case study suggests that enhancing social justice towards socio-economically vulnerable groups correlates with the prevention of the spread of COVID-19; these benefits to public health can be explained by the fact that those policies create social distancing and less exposure to the COVID-19 virus and other contagious diseases and also remove disincentives to the use of healthcare services.


Subject(s)
COVID-19/epidemiology , Communicable Disease Control/methods , Public Health/ethics , Public Policy , Social Justice , Humans , Pandemics , Portugal/epidemiology
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