重新思考新公共卫生

Lindsay F. Wiley
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引用次数: 12

摘要

本文通过将公共卫生法的合法范围与公共妨害法中的特定理论辩论联系起来,有助于新兴的关于公共卫生法合法范围的理论辩论。州和地方政府利用对有害工业的公害诉讼来维护集体拥有的不干涉公共健康和安全的普通法权利的努力在很大程度上受到阻碍。这一诉讼失败的方式对刚刚开始形成的更广泛的公共卫生运动具有指导意义。随着对健康决定因素的科学认识不断发展,公共卫生倡导者正在迅速实施新的法律和政策工具,以改变我们的环境和行为,从而改善人口水平的健康。这种“新公共卫生”运动的批评者试图通过将公共卫生的法律和政治与其科学分离来保护个人自由。他们认为,心脏病和糖尿病等现代健康威胁是个人问题,本质上不够公开,不足以引发国家干预凌驾于个人权利之上的理论。参与这一理论辩论的公共卫生学者忽视了公共妨害法中一个相关的理论辩论,在这个辩论中,法院一直在努力界定“公共权利”的范围,包括不干涉公共卫生的权利。在两场辩论中,批评人士都正确地坚持认为,公众绝不仅仅是私人利益的集合体。但是,批评者提出的狭隘的公众概念未能充分考虑到国家在公共卫生方面的权力和责任。本文通过采纳公共卫生法批评家的经典自由主义观点(即国家干预个人自由需要强有力的理由),表明了一种中间立场,同时也宽泛地定义了公众,以证明在公共卫生的旗帜下进行大量国家干预是合理的。通过对作为公共卫生工具的公共滋扰诉讼的分析,我提出,流行病学危害——我将其定义为那些可以在人口水平上建立因果关系,但不一定在个人水平上建立因果关系的危害——应该被理解为公共危害。这种公众概念为新的公共卫生法运动提供了更有力的理由,它更牢固地建立在社会流行病学的科学基础上。
本文章由计算机程序翻译,如有差异,请以英文原文为准。
Rethinking the New Public Health
This Article contributes to an emerging theoretical debate over the legitimate scope of public health law by linking it to a particular doctrinal debate in public nuisance law. State and local governments have been largely stymied in their efforts to use public nuisance litigation against harmful industries to vindicate collectively-held, common law rights to non-interference with public health and safety. The ways in which this litigation has failed are instructive for a broader movement in public health that is only just beginning to take shape. In response to evolving scientific understanding about the determinants of health, public health advocates are rapidly implementing new law and policy tools to alter our environments and behaviors in ways that improve health at the population level. Critics of this “new public health” movement seek to safeguard individual liberty by disconnecting the law and politics of public health from its science. They argue that modern health threats such as heart disease and diabetes are individual concerns not sufficiently public in nature to trigger doctrines that privilege state intervention over individual rights. Public health scholars engaged in this theoretical debate have overlooked a related doctrinal debate within public nuisance law in which courts have struggled to define the scope of “public rights,” including the right to non-interference with public health. In both debates, critics have rightly insisted that the public must be more than the mere aggregation of private interests. But the narrower conceptions of the public that critics have put forth fail to account for the full scope of the state’s authority and responsibility for public health. This Article stakes out a middle position by adopting the classically liberal view of public health law critics — that state interference with individual liberty requires robust justification — while also defining the public broadly so as to justify considerable state intervention under the banner of public health. Drawing on analysis of public nuisance litigation as a public health tool, I propose that epidemiological harms—which I define as those for which causation can be established at the population level, but not necessarily at the individual level—should be understood as public bads. This conception of the public provides a more robust justification for the new public health law movement that more firmly grounds it in the science of social epidemiology.
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