Into the “New Normal”: The Ethical and Analytical Challenge Facing Public Health Post-COVID-19
Hagai Boas and
Nadav Davidovitch
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Hagai Boas: Department of Politics and Government, Ben-Gurion University of the Negev and Van Leer Jerusalem Institute, Jerusalem 9214116, Israel
Nadav Davidovitch: Faculty of Health Sciences, School of Public Health, Ben-Gurion University of the Negev, Beer Sheva 8410501, Israel
IJERPH, 2022, vol. 19, issue 14, 1-12
Abstract:
Even though various countries’ overall policy for dealing with the pandemic was not particularly innovative, the pandemic was perceived as a unique crisis. “COVID exceptionalism” has seemed to create “a new normal” that we all need to “learn to live with”. The main change in perspective, while not new for public health experts, is that health exists within a social and political context. While public health ethics has turned out to be an important discipline, there is a long way to its wider acceptance. Entering the “new normal” calls for a wider embrace of public health approaches to ethics. The renewed emphasis on understanding health as a social concept encompasses central normative implications in relation to dealing with COVID-19 and in relation to dealing with other global crises, chiefly climate change. We argue that entering the era of “the new normal” in healthcare requires a nuanced understanding of the relationship between the individual and society and demands the formulation of a new system of bioethics focused on the concept of solidarity as a central value in public health. Such a concept should refer to the fact that in the “new normal”, risks require new social and political formations of standing together in confronting risks that cross national, cultural, and identity borders. Forming and expanding solidarity in health and healthcare, we argue, is the main normative challenge for public health today.
Keywords: new normal; COVID-19; public health ethics; community; bioethics; vaccinations (search for similar items in EconPapers)
JEL-codes: I I1 I3 Q Q5 (search for similar items in EconPapers)
Date: 2022
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