About the Book
Bioethics, still in its infancy, is routinely called on by the government to provide political cover for controversial public health decisions involving the life and death of Americans. Doomsday or worst-case scenarios are often at the heart of these biopolitical decisions. A central feature of science fiction, these scenarios can impart useful insights. But worst-case scenarios, like Frankenstein's monster, can also be unpredictably destructive, undermining both preparedness and the very values bioethics seeks to promote. Discovering a new flu strain, for example, leads immediately to visions of the 1918 flu pandemic, the worst in human history. Likewise, a "ticking time bomb" scenario leads to the use of the "saving lives" rationale that permits lawyers to justify it and physicians to carry it out. The worst case charge of "death panels" continues to threaten meaningful healthcare reform in the US. Fundamental change in American healthcare, Annas argues, will require fundamental change in American, including confronting our obsession with technology and our denial of death, and replacing our over-reliance on the military and market metaphors in medicine. "A combination of the ecological and rights metaphors could help us successfully navigate the waters of change."
In Worst Case Bioethics, George Annas employs contemporary disputes involving death and disaster to explore the radical changes underway in public health practice, the application of constitutional law to medicine, and human rights discourse to promote human health and wellbeing. Worst-case scenarios, especially worst-case bioethics scenarios, distort debate, limit options, rationalize human rights abuses, and undermine equality and social justice. It is, nonetheless, possible to temper worst-case scenarios in ways that promote both the development of a meaningful American bioethics, and a life and liberty affirming global health and human rights movement.
Written at the intersection of law, bioethics, public health, and human rights, Worst Case Bioethics will interest not only bioethicists but scholars in public health, public policy, and human rights law, as well as members of the public who want to participate in these policy debates.
About the Author :
George Annas is William Fairfield Warren Professor at Boston University and Chair of the Department of Health Law, Bioethics & Human Rights, Boston University School of Public Health. He is also Professor in the Boston University schools of Medicine and Law. He is the co-founder of Global Lawyers and Physicians, a transnational group that promotes human rights and health. He is a fellow of the American Association for the Advancement of Science, a member of the Institute of Medicine, and a member of the National Academies' Human Rights Committee.
Review :
"George Annas, one of the country's most respected bioethicists, shows how worst case thinking has consistently driven bad public policy, on issues from torture and counterterrorism to assisted suicide and the way we plan for pandemics. His sober perspective is welcome in a field that is often subject to extreme predictions and even more extreme remedies." --Francis Fukuyama, Bernard L. Schwartz Professor of International Political Economy, The Johns Hopkins School of Advanced International Studies
"This is vintage Annas--astute and analytically arresting. There are few who can match Annas' broad knowledge of the worst case medical-legal scenarios multiplying in today's bioethical discourse." --Edmund D. Pellegrino, M.D., M.A.C.P., Professor Emeritus of Medicine and Medical Ethics, Georgetown University
"...a creative and insightful rubric for examining different aspects of U.S. healthcare and law."--Doody's
"In short, Worst Case Bioethics offers a valuable consideration of how public health policy is sometimes shaped by fear in a counterproductive manner. The book is well written, well reasoned, and persuasive. I recommend it highly to all who are interested in bioethics, public health policy, or national security policy." --Science
"To readers unfamiliar with his work, this means it is carefully reasoned, clearly articulated, and pulls no punches. He boldly tackles the most contentious issues in bioethics and public
policy, including abortion, physician-assisted suicide, the death penalty, torture, medical marijuana, and patient safety." --The Journal of Legal Medicine
"It is a rarity when a highly regarded substantive expert writes a compelling book that addresses cogently some of the most important public policy issues of our time. George J. Annas has done that in his new book Worst Case Bioethics, Death, Disaster, and Public Health...it is as important as it is complete..."--The Journal of Contemporary Health Law and Policy