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Produktdetails

Verlag
Springer Nature Singapore
Springer Singapore
Erschienen
2019
Sprache
English
Seiten
208
Infos
208 Seiten
235 mm x 155 mm
ISBN
978-981-134-776-4

Hauptbeschreibung



This edited volume draws on ten original contributions that locate ethics at the centre-stage of public health practice. The essays explicate ethical issues, challenges, deliberations and resolutions covering a broad canvas of public health practice including policies, programmes, research, training and advocacy. The contributors are academics and practitioners in varying roles and long-standing engagement with public health in diverse settings within India. Their expertise in disciplines range from anthropology, sociology, health communications, gender studies, economics, epidemiology, social work and medicine. Their chapters deal with dimensions of ethical dilemmas that can rarely be defined and contained within ethical guidelines and protocols alone. Instead, they throw light on the associated factors, value systems and contexts in which such complexities occur and require response or redressal. This volume aims to articulate the growing awareness among practitioners that public health ethics is not merely an advanced grouping of possible problems and solutions. It hopes to facilitate robust platforms for dialogue and debate on the subject through the lenses of these contributions. The book is conceptualized to reach broader audiences such as public health practitioners and researchers in several roles within Government health systems, NGOs/Grass root organizations/CSR initiatives/advocacy groups; as well as researchers in academic settings and facilitators involved in teaching ethics and imparting training for students and young practitioners of public health.





Inhaltsverzeichnis




Part I: Introduction to Public Health Ethics and Rights.- Chapter 1. Locating Public Health Ethics
Arima Mishra & Kalyani Subbiah
.- Chapter 2. Public Health Rights and Ethics: Conflicts, Contestations and Expanding Horizons
E. Premdas Pinto.-
Part II: Ethics in Program Design, Implementation, Evaluation.- Chapter 3. Knowledge, Framing and Ethics in Programme Design and Evaluation
Suraj Jacob
.- Chapter 4. Ethical Analysis of Public Health Programs: What Does it Entail?
Giridhara R. Babu & Yamuna A
.- Chapter 5. The Endosulfan Tragedy of Kasargod: Role of Public Health Ethics in the Design of Non-public Health Programs
Adithya Pradyumna
.- Part III: Ethical issues in public health research.- Chapter 6. Qualitative Research in/on Health Systems: Ethical Tensions, Confounders and Silences
Surekha Gariemalla
.- Chapter 7. Data Ethics in Epidemiology: Autonomy, Privacy, Confidentiality and Justice
Vijayaprasad Gopichandran
& Varalakshmi Elango
.- Chapter 8. Ethical Issues and Challenges in Research on Gender, Reproductive Technologies and Market
Sarojini Nadimpally & Deepa Venkatachalami
.- Part IV: Capacity Building in Public Health Ethics.- Chapter 9. Public Health Ethics in the Medical College Curriculum: Challenges and Opportunities
Mario Vaz
.- Chapter 10. ‘Now We feel, Ethics Is Everywhere’: Reflections on Designing and Teaching a Course on Ethics in Public Health Practice
Arima Mishra.





Klappentext



This edited volume draws on ten original contributions that locate ethics at the centre-stage of public health practice. The essays explicate ethical issues, challenges, deliberations and resolutions covering a broad canvas of public health practice including policies, programmes, research, training and advocacy. The contributors are academics and practitioners in varying roles and long-standing engagement with public health in diverse settings within India. Their expertise in disciplines range from anthropology, sociology, health communications, gender studies, economics, epidemiology, social work and medicine. Their chapters deal with dimensions of ethical dilemmas that can rarely be defined and contained within ethical guidelines and protocols alone. Instead, they throw light on the associated factors, value systems and contexts in which such complexities occur and require response or redressal.This volume aims to articulate the growing awareness among practitioners that public health ethics is not merely an advanced grouping of possible problems and solutions. It hopes to facilitate robust platforms for dialogue and debate on the subject through the lenses of these contributions. The book is conceptualized to reach broader audiences such as public health practitioners and researchers in several roles within Government health systems, NGOs/Grass root organizations/CSR initiatives/advocacy groups; as well as researchers in academic settings and facilitators involved in teaching ethics and imparting training for students and young practitioners of public health.





Über den AutorIn

Arima Mishra is a Professor of Medical Anthropology and Public Health in Azim Premji University, Bangalore India.  Her research and teaching interests include social determinants of health and health equity, health system ethnography, public health ethics, maternal and child health and medical pluralism. She has published widely in national and international journals. She is the editor of Health, illness and medicine: Ethnographic Readings (2010), co-editor of Multiple voices and stories: Narratives of health and illness (2013) apart from guest editing special issues of Indian Anthropologist on Anthropology and Public Health (2013) and (co-editing) Global Public Health  on Critical ethnographies of health systems policies and practices (2014).  

Kalyani Subbiah has several years of experience in public health research, communication and teaching in India. Her work is committed to risk-reduction, accessibility to preventive measures and promotion of women’s health through ethical responsibility of programs, research and key functionaries in health systems. Kalyani is currently pursuing a PhD in International Health at the Faculty of Health Sciences, Curtin University, Australia, with the support of an Australian Government Research Training Program Scholarship.