Mass vaccination has been a successful public health strategy for many contagious diseases. The immunity of the vaccinated also protects others who cannot be safely or effectively vaccinated-including infants and the immunosuppressed. When vaccination rates fall, diseases like measles can rapidly resurge in a population. Those who cannot be vaccinated for medical reasons are at the highest risk of severe disease and death. They thus may bear the burden of others' freedom to opt out of vaccination. It is often asked whether it is legitimate for states to adopt and enforce mandatory universal vaccination. Yet this neglects a related question: are those who opt out, where it is permitted, morally responsible when others are harmed or die as a ...
An analysis on the history of vaccines, the impact on public health they have made, and the recently...
Parents who do not vaccinate their children create risk of harm to those in society who are vulnerab...
Should people get vaccinated for the sake of others? What could ground—and limit—the normative claim...
Despite the success of vaccines in preventing and sometimes eradicating infectious diseases, and des...
The measles outbreak of early 2015 is symptomatic of a larger societal problem–the growing number of...
Background: Immunization programmes are ethically defensible and society has a significant role to p...
Vaccination policy is an ethically challenging domain of public policy. It is a matter of collective...
Vaccinations against life-threatening diseases are one of the greatest public health achievements in...
Mandatory vaccination, including for COVID-19, can be ethically justified if the threat to public he...
The COVID-19 pandemic during 2020-2022 raised ethical questions concerning the balance between indiv...
The introduction of punitive measures to control outbreaks of measles in Europe has sparked debate a...
The potential for vaccines to prevent the spread of infectious diseases is crucial for vaccination p...
Vaccination involves the use of killed or attenuated microorganism or its antigenic component such a...
Since their widespread introduction in the early 20th century, vaccinations have saved millions of l...
The social responsibility logic underpinning vaccination is omnipresent in the rhetoric surrounding...
An analysis on the history of vaccines, the impact on public health they have made, and the recently...
Parents who do not vaccinate their children create risk of harm to those in society who are vulnerab...
Should people get vaccinated for the sake of others? What could ground—and limit—the normative claim...
Despite the success of vaccines in preventing and sometimes eradicating infectious diseases, and des...
The measles outbreak of early 2015 is symptomatic of a larger societal problem–the growing number of...
Background: Immunization programmes are ethically defensible and society has a significant role to p...
Vaccination policy is an ethically challenging domain of public policy. It is a matter of collective...
Vaccinations against life-threatening diseases are one of the greatest public health achievements in...
Mandatory vaccination, including for COVID-19, can be ethically justified if the threat to public he...
The COVID-19 pandemic during 2020-2022 raised ethical questions concerning the balance between indiv...
The introduction of punitive measures to control outbreaks of measles in Europe has sparked debate a...
The potential for vaccines to prevent the spread of infectious diseases is crucial for vaccination p...
Vaccination involves the use of killed or attenuated microorganism or its antigenic component such a...
Since their widespread introduction in the early 20th century, vaccinations have saved millions of l...
The social responsibility logic underpinning vaccination is omnipresent in the rhetoric surrounding...
An analysis on the history of vaccines, the impact on public health they have made, and the recently...
Parents who do not vaccinate their children create risk of harm to those in society who are vulnerab...
Should people get vaccinated for the sake of others? What could ground—and limit—the normative claim...