Stockholm University
Department of Philosophy
PhD, 1993
Göteborg, Vastra Gotaland, Sweden
Areas of Specialization
Applied Ethics
  •  17
    Societal decisions regarding the possible granting of permission for industrial and power plants, waste disposals, traffic routes and other facilities implementing modern science and technology (here simply called technology-decisions) often provoke debates regarding the risks involved. A main theme in these debates concerns the magnitudes of these risks and whether or not they are worth taking to reach some aim. This is also a main theme in traditional risk-analysis and critical discussions of …Read more
  •  349
    Shared decision-making and patient autonomy
    with Lars Sandman
    Theoretical Medicine and Bioethics 30 (4): 289-310. 2009.
    In patient-centred care, shared decision-making is advocated as the preferred form of medical decision-making. Shared decision-making is supported with reference to patient autonomy without abandoning the patient or giving up the possibility of influencing how the patient is benefited. It is, however, not transparent how shared decision-making is related to autonomy and, in effect, what support autonomy can give shared decision-making. In the article, different forms of shared decision-making ar…Read more
  •  217
    The goals of public health: An integrated, multidimensional model
    Public Health Ethics 1 (1): 39-52. 2008.
    While promoting population health has been the classic goal of public health practice and policy, in recent decades, new objectives in terms of autonomy and equality have been introduced. These different goals are analysed, and it is demonstrated how they may conflict severly in several ways, leaving serious unclarities both regarding the normative issue of what goal should be pursued by public health, what that implies in practical terms, and the descriptive issue of what goal that actually is …Read more
  •  14
    Review of Lennart Nordenfeldt's Talking about Health (review)
    Theoria 66 (3): 293-298. 2000.
  •  27
    Standard versions of the requirement of informed consent state that patients who are offered to enter a clinical trial of a medical procedure should be informed about risks and possible benefits of this procedure (compared to available alternatives) in order to facilitate a rational decision whether or not to participate. However, in many real cases where new medical procedures are to be clinically tested for the first time the information available for such communication to prospective patients…Read more
  •  119
    Divisibility and the Moral Status of Embryos
    Bioethics 15 (5-6): 382-397. 2001.
    The phenomenon of twinning in early fetal development has become a popular source for doubt regarding the ascription of moral status to early embryos. In this paper, the possible moral basis for such a line of reasoning is critically analysed with sceptical results. Three different versions of the argument from twinning are considered, all of which are found to rest on confusions between the actual division of embryos involed in twinning and the property of early embryos to be divisible, be base…Read more
  •  75
    This book involves an in-depth analysis of the ethical, political and philosophical issues related to health-oriented screening programs.
  •  90
    The argument from transfer
    Bioethics 10 (1). 1996.
    Utilitarian arguments on bioethical issues regarding human reproduction typically start with the view that it is wrong, other things being equal, not to procreate when this would have resulted in an additional being with a life worth living. The paper takes this view for granted and examines the common utilitarian claim that overpopulation and destitution in the world mean that, in practice, this obligation to procreate, other things being equal, often turns into a (categorical) obligation not t…Read more