Access to Healthcare: A Central Question within Brazilian Bioethics

Cambridge Quarterly of Healthcare Ethics : CQ : the International Journal of Healthcare Ethics Committees
Volnei GarrafaCamilo Manchola

Abstract

This article explores the current situation regarding the importance of access to healthcare in relation to the genesis and context of bioethics developed in Brazil, a country in which healthcare is understood through the national constitution to be a universal right of its population. Since the onset of the development of Brazilian bioethics at the beginning of the 1990s, topics relating directly and indirectly to the field of public health have been a priority in the bioethics agenda. The article considers the socioeconomic context within which conflicts occur, an issue that has been addressed in other scientific articles on bioethics in Latin America. It presents the main conceptual bases of intervention bioethics, a critical approach that has been developed as a reference point in this region, with the aim of analyzing (bio)ethical issues and indicating solutions that relate specifically to the different forms of social exclusion that influence the health conditions and lives of people in Brazil, as well as in other peripheral countries in the Southern Hemisphere and of the world in general. The article calls attention to some of the problems and challenges that the Brazilian public health system has been facing. An interna...Continue Reading

References

May 23, 2009·Cambridge Quarterly of Healthcare Ethics : CQ : the International Journal of Healthcare Ethics Committees·Pablo Rodríguez Del Pozo, José A Mainetti
May 13, 2011·Lancet·Sabine Kleinert, Richard Horton
Sep 14, 2012·BMC Public Health·Josefien van OlmenPeter S Hill

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Citations

Apr 5, 2020·International Journal of Environmental Research and Public Health·Marco AngeloEva Pilot
Jan 23, 2022·Archives of public health = Archives belges de santé publique·Ramiro E GilardinoSusan B Rifkin

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