
pmid: 33542106
Prioritarianism pertains to the generic idea that it matters more to benefit people, the worse off they are, and while prioritarianism is not uncontroversial, it is considered a generally plausible and widely shared distributive principle often applied to healthcare prioritisation. In this paper, I identify social justice prioritarianism, severity prioritarianism and age-weighted prioritarianism as three different interpretations of the general prioritarian idea and discuss them in light of the effect of pandemic consequences on healthcare priority setting. On this analysis, the paper arrives at the following three conclusions: (1) that we have strong prioritarian reasons for special concern about the vulnerable and socially disadvantaged in reference to pandemic effects, (2) that severity of illness is an important factor in identifying the worse off in priority setting but that this must not over-ride the special priority to the socially disadvantaged and (3) that the maximisation rationale of the age-weighted view runs against the core prioritarian idea, and the age-weighted prioritarianism is thus unfitting as a prioritarian response to the COVID-19 case.
Health Care Rationing, Health Policy, COVID-19, Vulnerable Populations, Health(social science), Issues, ethics and legal aspects, Arts and Humanities (miscellaneous), Social Justice, Humans, Delivery of Health Care, Pandemics
Health Care Rationing, Health Policy, COVID-19, Vulnerable Populations, Health(social science), Issues, ethics and legal aspects, Arts and Humanities (miscellaneous), Social Justice, Humans, Delivery of Health Care, Pandemics
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