Table of Contents:
  • Seeing infectious disease as central
  • The biological basics of infectious disease
  • Characteristics of infectious disease that raise distinctive challenges for bioethics
  • How infectious disease got left out of bioethics
  • Closing the book on infectious disease: the mischievous consequences for public health
  • Embedded autonomy and the "way-station self"
  • The multiple perspectives of the "patient as victim and vector" view
  • Old wine in new bottles: traditional issues in bioethics from the victim/vector perspective
  • From the magic mountain to a dying homeless man and his dog: imposing isolation and treatment in tuberculosis care
  • The ethics of research in infectious disease: experimenting on this patient, risking harm to that one
  • Vertical transmission of infectious diseases and genetic disorders.
  • Should rapid tests for HIV infection now be mandatory during pregnancy or in labor?
  • Antimicrobial resistance
  • Immunization and the HPV vaccine
  • A thought experiment: rapid-test screening for infectious disease in airports and places of public contact
  • Constraints in the control of infectious disease
  • Pandemic planning: what is ethically justified?
  • Compensation and the victims of constraint
  • Pandemic planning and the justice of health-care distribution
  • Thinking big: emerging global efforts for the control of infectious disease
  • The "patient as victim and vector" view as critical and diagnostic tool.