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引用次数: 0
摘要
抗菌素耐药性(AMR)是对公共卫生的一个紧迫的全球性威胁。制定和实施有效措施来应对 AMR 至关重要,但也提出了重要的伦理问题。这是一个需要进一步持续关注的政策领域,以确保国家 AMR 行动计划中提出的政策在伦理上是可接受的,并且优于可能更公平或更有效的替代政策。通过对各国采取强制性行动应对 AMR 的案例研究进行伦理分析,我们可以更好地根据具体情况制定政策。在本文中,我将举例说明加拿大的强制性抗菌药物管理政策,即限制畜牧业者在没有兽医处方的情况下使用某些抗生素。我介绍并分析了在这种情况下可能为强制行动提供正当理由的两个伦理论点:伤害原则和集体易救责任。此外,我还考虑了一般情况下可能会限制这些伦理概念应用的因素,例如在确定因果关系或证明需要避免的伤害程度方面的挑战。我还考虑了加拿大的具体情况,并以英国和博茨瓦纳为例进行对比,以说明具体情况可能意味着在一个国家符合伦理的强制政策在另一个国家却不符合伦理。
Stewardship according to context: Justifications for coercive antimicrobial stewardship policies in agriculture and their limitations
Antimicrobial resistance (AMR) is an urgent, global threat to public health. The development and implementation of effective measures to address AMR is vitally important but presents important ethical questions. This is a policy area requiring further sustained attention to ensure that policies proposed in National Action Plans on AMR are ethically acceptable and preferable to alternatives that might be fairer or more effective, for instance. By ethically analysing case studies of coercive actions to address AMR across countries, we can better inform policy in a context-specific manner. In this article, I consider an example of coercive antimicrobial stewardship policy in Canada, namely restrictions on livestock farmers' access to certain antibiotics for animal use without a vet's prescription. I introduce and analyse two ethical arguments that might plausibly justify coercive action in this case: the harm principle and a duty of collective easy rescue. In addition, I consider the factors that might generally limit the application of those ethical concepts, such as challenges in establishing causation or evidencing the scale of the harm to be averted. I also consider specifics of the Canadian context in contrast to the UK and Botswana as example settings, to demonstrate how context-specific factors might mean a coercive policy that is ethically justified in one country is not so in another.
期刊介绍:
As medical technology continues to develop, the subject of bioethics has an ever increasing practical relevance for all those working in philosophy, medicine, law, sociology, public policy, education and related fields.
Bioethics provides a forum for well-argued articles on the ethical questions raised by current issues such as: international collaborative clinical research in developing countries; public health; infectious disease; AIDS; managed care; genomics and stem cell research. These questions are considered in relation to concrete ethical, legal and policy problems, or in terms of the fundamental concepts, principles and theories used in discussions of such problems.
Bioethics also features regular Background Briefings on important current debates in the field. These feature articles provide excellent material for bioethics scholars, teachers and students alike.