The Ethics of Public Health Paternalism

SKU: 9780198895817
Regular price $200.99
Unit price
per
  • Author:
    WILKINSON T
  • ISBN:
    9780198895817
  • Publication Date:
    May 2025
  • Edition:
    1
  • Pages:
    256
  • Binding:
    Hardback
  • Publisher:
    Oxford University Press
  • Country of Publication:
    United Kingdom
The Ethics of Public Health Paternalism
The Ethics of Public Health Paternalism

The Ethics of Public Health Paternalism

SKU: 9780198895817
Regular price $200.99
Unit price
per
  • Author:
    WILKINSON T
  • ISBN:
    9780198895817
  • Publication Date:
    May 2025
  • Edition:
    1
  • Pages:
    256
  • Binding:
    Hardback
  • Publisher:
    Oxford University Press
  • Country of Publication:
    United Kingdom

Description

The Ethics of Public Health Paternalism is about policies that try to stop people damaging their own health. From the point of view of public health advocates, if people did not smoke, or drank less alcohol, or kept off junk food and sugary liquids, they would tend to be healthier. Hence such tactics as taxing tobacco, restricting the sale of alcohol, and limiting the density of fast-food outlets. Because these tactics appear to limit freedom of choice, they are often pejoratively described as the actions of a 'nanny state' that overvalues health and wrongly infringes on the autonomy of adults. But many of us want to be healthy rather than ill, and alive rather than dead. Does a state really nanny us when it uses its power to make us healthier? If it does, should it stop?

Some public health policies might reduce inequities of health, or save costs in medical treatment, or correct market failures. But, as this book shows, lots would not. The best case for many public health interventions is paternalistic, aiming to steer people away from making unhealthy choices against their own interests. But even though it is the best case, it often fails. It overvalues health and undervalues autonomy. It exaggerates the influence of addiction and the marketing of unhealthy products. Except for smoking, we do not have the evidence needed to show that unhealthy choices are so mistaken as to justify the interventions. Much of what modern public health does, when it tries to stop adults damaging their health, has not been justified.

The Ethics of Public Health Paternalism applies political and moral philosophy to the ideas of both supporters and critics of public health interventions. It uses philosophical analysis of the values of health and well-being to explain what sort of evidence is needed to support public health interventions, thus exposing a major gap in the arguments of public health advocates, and it engages in detail with empirical evidence, for instance about smokers' regrets.

Martin Wilkinson has undergraduate and doctoral degrees from Oxford University. He worked in the Department of Political Studies at the University of Auckland from 1993-2002 and returned in 2009 after several years working in the School of Population Health. He is the author of Ethics and the Acquisition of Organs (Oxford University Press, 2011). He was Chair of the Bioethics Council and Deputy Chair of the National Ethics Advisory Committee, and is currently a member of Auckland Hospital's Clinical Ethics Advisory Group.

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  • The Ethics of Public Health Paternalism is about policies that try to stop people damaging their own health. From the point of view of public health advocates, if people did not smoke, or drank less alcohol, or kept off junk food and sugary liquids, they would tend to be healthier. Hence such tactics as taxing tobacco, restricting the sale of alcohol, and limiting the density of fast-food outlets. Because these tactics appear to limit freedom of choice, they are often pejoratively described as the actions of a 'nanny state' that overvalues health and wrongly infringes on the autonomy of adults. But many of us want to be healthy rather than ill, and alive rather than dead. Does a state really nanny us when it uses its power to make us healthier? If it does, should it stop?

    Some public health policies might reduce inequities of health, or save costs in medical treatment, or correct market failures. But, as this book shows, lots would not. The best case for many public health interventions is paternalistic, aiming to steer people away from making unhealthy choices against their own interests. But even though it is the best case, it often fails. It overvalues health and undervalues autonomy. It exaggerates the influence of addiction and the marketing of unhealthy products. Except for smoking, we do not have the evidence needed to show that unhealthy choices are so mistaken as to justify the interventions. Much of what modern public health does, when it tries to stop adults damaging their health, has not been justified.

    The Ethics of Public Health Paternalism applies political and moral philosophy to the ideas of both supporters and critics of public health interventions. It uses philosophical analysis of the values of health and well-being to explain what sort of evidence is needed to support public health interventions, thus exposing a major gap in the arguments of public health advocates, and it engages in detail with empirical evidence, for instance about smokers' regrets.

    Martin Wilkinson has undergraduate and doctoral degrees from Oxford University. He worked in the Department of Political Studies at the University of Auckland from 1993-2002 and returned in 2009 after several years working in the School of Population Health. He is the author of Ethics and the Acquisition of Organs (Oxford University Press, 2011). He was Chair of the Bioethics Council and Deputy Chair of the National Ethics Advisory Committee, and is currently a member of Auckland Hospital's Clinical Ethics Advisory Group.

The Ethics of Public Health Paternalism is about policies that try to stop people damaging their own health. From the point of view of public health advocates, if people did not smoke, or drank less alcohol, or kept off junk food and sugary liquids, they would tend to be healthier. Hence such tactics as taxing tobacco, restricting the sale of alcohol, and limiting the density of fast-food outlets. Because these tactics appear to limit freedom of choice, they are often pejoratively described as the actions of a 'nanny state' that overvalues health and wrongly infringes on the autonomy of adults. But many of us want to be healthy rather than ill, and alive rather than dead. Does a state really nanny us when it uses its power to make us healthier? If it does, should it stop?

Some public health policies might reduce inequities of health, or save costs in medical treatment, or correct market failures. But, as this book shows, lots would not. The best case for many public health interventions is paternalistic, aiming to steer people away from making unhealthy choices against their own interests. But even though it is the best case, it often fails. It overvalues health and undervalues autonomy. It exaggerates the influence of addiction and the marketing of unhealthy products. Except for smoking, we do not have the evidence needed to show that unhealthy choices are so mistaken as to justify the interventions. Much of what modern public health does, when it tries to stop adults damaging their health, has not been justified.

The Ethics of Public Health Paternalism applies political and moral philosophy to the ideas of both supporters and critics of public health interventions. It uses philosophical analysis of the values of health and well-being to explain what sort of evidence is needed to support public health interventions, thus exposing a major gap in the arguments of public health advocates, and it engages in detail with empirical evidence, for instance about smokers' regrets.

Martin Wilkinson has undergraduate and doctoral degrees from Oxford University. He worked in the Department of Political Studies at the University of Auckland from 1993-2002 and returned in 2009 after several years working in the School of Population Health. He is the author of Ethics and the Acquisition of Organs (Oxford University Press, 2011). He was Chair of the Bioethics Council and Deputy Chair of the National Ethics Advisory Committee, and is currently a member of Auckland Hospital's Clinical Ethics Advisory Group.