Title of article
The ethics of social risk reduction in the era of the biological brain
Author/Authors
Ted Schrecker، نويسنده , , Lisa Acosta، نويسنده , , Margaret A. Somerville، نويسنده , , Harold J. Bursztajn، نويسنده ,
Issue Information
دوهفته نامه با شماره پیاپی سال 2001
Pages
11
From page
1677
To page
1687
Abstract
In keeping with our transdisciplinary orientation, in this article we try to do several things at once. We address research on preventing mental illness and its relation to existing conceptions of public health, a topic to which insufficient attention has been paid in the era of the biological brain, while using this case study to illustrate the limits of conventional approaches in bioethics. After identifying the crucial need for methodological self-consciousness in prevention research and policy, we explore the implications as they relate to (i) the values embedded in the choice of research designs and strategies, and (ii) contrasting intellectual starting points regarding the biological plausibility of preventing mental illness. We then draw attention to the need for more thoughtful analysis of the appropriate role and limits of economics in making choices about prevention of mental illness.
Keywords
economics , Ethics , Mental Illness , prevention , public health , methodology
Journal title
Social Science and Medicine
Serial Year
2001
Journal title
Social Science and Medicine
Record number
600720
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