No Shortage of Dilemmas: Comment on “They Call It ‘Patient Selection’ in Khayelitsha”

Cambridge Quarterly of Healthcare Ethics 15 (3):313-321 (2006)
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Abstract

Any program seeking to provide antiretroviral treatment to the many patients in need is bound to confront ethical dilemmas. Dilemmas, as we know, are situations in which decisionmakers are faced with a choice between equally unsatisfactory alternatives. Yet those in charge must make a decision or establish a policy that takes one pathway to the exclusion of another. Reasonable people may disagree over the choice, arguing that an alternative selection would have been ethically superior.

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Cholera and Nothing More.M. R. Hunt - 2010 - Public Health Ethics 3 (1):55-59.

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