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Vaccination ethics

Vaccination ethics
Vaccination ethics
One does not have to look too far within the popular media, and increasingly within medical journals, to find stories related to vaccines and vaccination that have ethical issues as a central component. Stories about parents refusing to vaccinate their children [1,2], the controversy involving the false linking of MMR vaccination to autism [3,4] or proposals to have mandatory vaccination for health care workers [5,6] demonstrate the different individual-level and population-level ethical issues raised by vaccination. These stories, however, represent only a mere fraction of the important and interesting ethical issues raised by vaccination. Nevertheless, they provide a valuable opportunity to examine the goals of vaccination – and how these goals may share or come into conflict with other goals. It is an opportunity to compare the goals of vaccination with the goals of medicine and of public health, as such goals raise fundamental moral issues and will shape the way in which we go about seeking to justify the use of vaccines in particular contexts.
Communicable Diseases, Disease Transmission, Infectious, Humans, Immunization Programs, Vaccination, Editorial, Introductory Journal Article, Research Support, Non-U.S. Gov't
7161-7162
Viens, A M
cc615c33-4e17-41b2-b82d-2c11569c0c34
Dawson, Angus
10350a63-0e66-4b11-8dea-7ad8670e2819
Viens, A M
cc615c33-4e17-41b2-b82d-2c11569c0c34
Dawson, Angus
10350a63-0e66-4b11-8dea-7ad8670e2819

Viens, A M and Dawson, Angus (2014) Vaccination ethics. Vaccine, 32 (52), 7161-7162. (doi:10.1016/j.vaccine.2014.10.032).

Record type: Article

Abstract

One does not have to look too far within the popular media, and increasingly within medical journals, to find stories related to vaccines and vaccination that have ethical issues as a central component. Stories about parents refusing to vaccinate their children [1,2], the controversy involving the false linking of MMR vaccination to autism [3,4] or proposals to have mandatory vaccination for health care workers [5,6] demonstrate the different individual-level and population-level ethical issues raised by vaccination. These stories, however, represent only a mere fraction of the important and interesting ethical issues raised by vaccination. Nevertheless, they provide a valuable opportunity to examine the goals of vaccination – and how these goals may share or come into conflict with other goals. It is an opportunity to compare the goals of vaccination with the goals of medicine and of public health, as such goals raise fundamental moral issues and will shape the way in which we go about seeking to justify the use of vaccines in particular contexts.

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More information

Published date: 12 December 2014
Keywords: Communicable Diseases, Disease Transmission, Infectious, Humans, Immunization Programs, Vaccination, Editorial, Introductory Journal Article, Research Support, Non-U.S. Gov't

Identifiers

Local EPrints ID: 413227
URI: http://eprints.soton.ac.uk/id/eprint/413227
PURE UUID: 8e059b55-8721-4a18-a65f-f76524e42e50

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Date deposited: 17 Aug 2017 16:30
Last modified: 15 Mar 2024 14:28

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Contributors

Author: A M Viens
Author: Angus Dawson

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