Title of article :
Public Health Ethics Related Training for Public Health Workforce: An Emerging Need in the United States
Author/Authors :
Kanekar, A Dept. of Health Sciences - Fribourgh Hall - University of Arkansas, USA , Bitto, A Dept. of Health Studies - East Stroudsburg University - USA
Abstract :
Background: Ethics is a discipline, which primarily deals with what is moral and immoral behavior. Public
Health Ethics is translation of ethical theories and concepts into practice to address complex multidimensional
public health problems. The primary purpose of this paper was to conduct a narrative literature reviewaddressing
role of ethics in developing curriculum in programs and schools of public health, ethics-related instruction
in schools and programs of public health and the role of ethics in developing a competent public health
workforce.
Methods: An open search of various health databases including Google scholar and Ebscohost yielded 15 articles
related to use of ethics in public health practice or public health training and the salient features were reported.
Results: Results indicated a variable amount of ethics’ related training in schools and programs of public health
along with public health practitioner training across the nation. Bioethics, medical ethics and public health ethics
were found to be subspecialties’ needing separate ethical frameworks to guide decision making.
Conclusions: Ethics based curricular and non-curricular training for emerging public health professionals from
schools and programs of public health in the United States is extremely essential. In the current age of public
health challenges faced in the United States and globally, to have an ethically untrained public health force is arguably,
immoral and unethical and jeopardizes population health. There is an urgent need to develop innovative
ethic based curriculums in academia as well as finding effective means to translate these curricular competencies
into public health practice.
Keywords :
Ethics , Public health Ethics , Competencies , Public health workforce , USA
Journal title :
Astroparticle Physics