Palliative care serves both as an integrated part of treatment and as a last effort to care for those we cannot cure. The extent to which palliative care should be provided and our reasons for doing so have been curiously overlooked in the debate about distributive justice in health and healthcare. We argue that one prominent approach, the Rawlsian approach developed by Norman Daniels, is unable to provide such reasons and such care. This is because of a central feature in Daniels' account, namely that care should be provided to restore people's opportunities. Daniels' view is both unable to provide pain relief to those who need it as a supplement to treatment and, without justice-based reasons to provide palliative care to those whose oppo...
Good health is universally valued because it allows us to lead productive, connected and flourishing...
What does it mean to be a just and caring society (or a just and caring hospital or managed care pla...
Palliative care is unusual as a specialty within health care in that it has its own philosophy, whic...
Palliative care serves both as an integrated part of treatment and as a last effort to care for thos...
This article considers attempts to include the issues of ageing and ill health in a Rawlsian framewo...
When the Patient Protection and Affordable Care Act (ACA) was signed into law in March 2010, it was ...
John Rawls developed principles of justice to guide the fair allocation of resources in a society. H...
Since the beginning of the hospice movement in 1967, total pain management has been the declared g...
For the past 20 years, there has been a growing awareness and acceptance of the palliative care conc...
Abstract‘Suffering’ is a central discursive trope for the right-to-die movement. In this article, we...
Much has happened in the theory of distributive justice during the last 30 years, in the period, rou...
Norman Daniels's theory of 'accountability for reasonableness' is an influential conception of fairn...
The consideration of the problem of healthcare allocation as a special case of distributive justice ...
Here is a health policy riddle: despite the fact that we are not always clear as to what we are tryi...
Journal ArticleDespite a growing consensus that palliative care should be a core part of the treatme...
Good health is universally valued because it allows us to lead productive, connected and flourishing...
What does it mean to be a just and caring society (or a just and caring hospital or managed care pla...
Palliative care is unusual as a specialty within health care in that it has its own philosophy, whic...
Palliative care serves both as an integrated part of treatment and as a last effort to care for thos...
This article considers attempts to include the issues of ageing and ill health in a Rawlsian framewo...
When the Patient Protection and Affordable Care Act (ACA) was signed into law in March 2010, it was ...
John Rawls developed principles of justice to guide the fair allocation of resources in a society. H...
Since the beginning of the hospice movement in 1967, total pain management has been the declared g...
For the past 20 years, there has been a growing awareness and acceptance of the palliative care conc...
Abstract‘Suffering’ is a central discursive trope for the right-to-die movement. In this article, we...
Much has happened in the theory of distributive justice during the last 30 years, in the period, rou...
Norman Daniels's theory of 'accountability for reasonableness' is an influential conception of fairn...
The consideration of the problem of healthcare allocation as a special case of distributive justice ...
Here is a health policy riddle: despite the fact that we are not always clear as to what we are tryi...
Journal ArticleDespite a growing consensus that palliative care should be a core part of the treatme...
Good health is universally valued because it allows us to lead productive, connected and flourishing...
What does it mean to be a just and caring society (or a just and caring hospital or managed care pla...
Palliative care is unusual as a specialty within health care in that it has its own philosophy, whic...