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53Comparativism and the Grounds for Person-Centered Care and Shared Decision MakingJournal of Clinical Ethics 28 (4): 269-278. 2017.This article provides a new argument and a new value-theoretical ground for person-centered care and shared decision making that ascribes to it the role of enabling rational choice in situations involving clinical choice. Rather than referring to good health outcomes and/or ethical grounds such as patient autonomy, it argues that a plausible justification and ground for person-centered care and shared decision making is preservation of rationality in the face of comparative non-determinacy in cl…Read more
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127The indispensability of sufficientarianismCritical Review of International Social and Political Philosophy 22 (7): 929-942. 2019.In this paper, I argue that sufficientarian principles are indispensable in the set of principles that have bearing on issues in distributive ethics. I provide two arguments in favor of this claim. First, I argue that sufficientarianism is the only framework that allows us to appropriately analyze what sort of obligations we have toward individuals who are badly off due to their own faults and choices. Second, I argue that sufficientarianism is the only theory that provides an adequate framework…Read more
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94The limited impact of indeterminacy for healthcare rationing: how indeterminacy problems show the need for a hybrid theory, but nothing moreJournal of Medical Ethics 42 (1): 22-25. 2016.A notorious debate in the ethics of healthcare rationing concerns whether to address rationing decisions with substantial principles or with a procedural approach. One major argument in favour of procedural approaches is that substantial principles are indeterminate so that we can reasonably disagree about how to apply them. To deal with indeterminacy, we need a just decision process. In this paper I argue that it is a mistake to abandon substantial principles just because they are indeterminate…Read more
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145Against lifetime QALY prioritarianismJournal of Medical Ethics 44 (2): 109-113. 2018.Lifetime quality-adjusted life-year (QALY) prioritarianism has recently been defended as a reasonable specification of the prioritarian view that benefits to the worse off should be given priority in health-related priority setting. This paper argues against this view with reference to how it relies on implausible assumptions. By referring to lifetime QALY as the basis for judgments about who is worse off lifetime QALY prioritarianism relies on assumptions of strict additivity, atomism and inter…Read more
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60Health, priority to the worse off, and timeMedicine, Health Care and Philosophy 21 (4): 517-527. 2018.It is a common view that benefits to the worse off should be given priority when health benefits are distributed. This paper addresses how to understand who is worse off in this context when individuals are differently well off at different times. The paper argues that the view that this judgment about who is worse off should be based solely on how well off individuals are when their complete lives are considered (i.e. 'the complete lives view') is implausible in this context. Instead, it is arg…Read more
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99Income-based equity weights in healthcare planning and policyJournal of Medical Ethics 43 (8): 510-514. 2017.Recent research indicates that there is a gap in life expectancy between the rich and the poor. This raises the question: should we on egalitarian grounds use income-based equity weights when we assess benefits of alternative benevolent interventions, so that health benefits to the poor count for more? This article provides three egalitarian arguments for using income-based equity weights under certain circumstances. If income inequality correlates with inequality in health, we have reason to us…Read more
Anders Herlitz
Institute for Futures Studies
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Institute for Futures StudiesOther
Areas of Specialization
| Value Theory |
| Applied Ethics |
| Normative Ethics |
| Social and Political Philosophy |
Areas of Interest
| Value Theory |
| Applied Ethics |
| Normative Ethics |
| Social and Political Philosophy |