4.8 Article

Does disease incite a stronger moral appeal than health?

Journal

BMC MEDICINE
Volume 21, Issue 1, Pages -

Publisher

BMC
DOI: 10.1186/s12916-023-03110-3

Keywords

Health; Disease; Wellbeing; Suffering; Moral appeal; Duty; Imperative

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The question of whether disease demotion is more important than health promotion is crucial in medicine and healthcare priority setting. This study explores different perspectives on health and disease and finds that some argue for a stronger moral appeal from disease than from health.
Is disease demotion more important than health promotion? The question is crucial for the ethos of medicine and for priority setting in healthcare. When things get tough, where should our attention and resources go: to health or disease? This study investigates two general perspectives on health and disease to address whether there is a stronger moral appeal from people's disease than from their health. While naturalist conceptions of health and disease are mute on moral appeal, normativist conceptions give diverse answers. Classical utilitarianism provides a symmetrical view of health and disease, according to which we have an equally strong moral appeal to further health as we have to reduce disease. Other normativist positions argue that there is an asymmetry between health and disease providing substantial support for a stronger moral appeal from disease than from health. This has a wide range of radical implications, especially within priority setting. In particular, treatment, palliation, and prevention of disease should have priority to the promotion and enhancement of health.

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