Human Rights and Public Health in the AIDS Pandemic
Lawrence O Gostin author Zita Lazzarini author
Format:Hardback
Publisher:Oxford University Press Inc
Published:10th Jul '97
Currently unavailable, and unfortunately no date known when it will be back
Historically, the fields of public health and human rights have remained largely separate. The AIDS pandemic, however, made it clear that a complex relationship exists between the two fields. Women and children have proven to be extremely vulnerable to infection with HIV due to their inability to protect themselves in intimate relationships, their sexual exploitation, and their lack of economic and educational alternatives. On the other hand, coercive government policies aimed at controlling the AIDS pandemic often infringe on the rights of individuals known or suspected of having AIDS, and decrease the effectiveness of public health measures. Protecting and promoting human rights is becoming one of the key means of preserving the health of individuals and populations. A penetrating analysis of the close relationship between public health and human rights, this book makes a compelling case for synergy between the two fields. Using the AIDS pandemic as a lens, the authors demonstrate that human health cannot be maintained without respect for the dignity and rights of persons, and that human rights cannot be deemed adequate and comprehensive without ensuring the health of individuals and populations. In the course of their analysis, Gostin and Lazzarini tackle some of the most vexing issues of our time, including the universality of human rights and the counter-claims of cultural relativity. Taking a cue from environmental impact assessments, they propose a human rights impact assessment for examining health policies. Such a tool will be invaluable for evaluating real-world public health problems and is bound to become essential for teaching human rights in schools of public health, medicine, government, and law. The volume critically examines such issues as HIV testing, screening, partner notification, isolation, quarantine, and criminalization of persons with HIV/AIDS, all within the framework of international human rights law. The authors evaluate the public health effects of a wide range of AIDS policies in developed as well as developing countries. The role of women in society receives special emphasis. Finally, the book presents three case histories that are important in the HIV/AIDS pandemic: discrimination and the transmission of HIV and tuberculosis in an occupational health care setting; breast feeding in the least developed countries; and confidentiality and the right of sexual partners to know of potential exposure to HIV. The...
The authors' discussion of the developments should be ideal for anyone seeking an introduction to the subject * The Lancet *
'...a helpful, well-informed book,...a valuable means to take understanding generated by the book to more sophisticated levels. * Prof.B.M.Dickens, Intl Digest of Health Legislation, 1998, 49 (2). *
'...an admirable introduction to the impact of human rights values on the development of HIV/AIDS policy,...In exploring their defined topic, the authors have paved a valuable pathway to new areas of public health engagement with human rights,...readers will benefit immensely from learning the analytical framework and skills presented in this book. It justifies its palce on the bookshelves of practitioners of a wide range of disciplines. * Prof. L.Delesie, Intnl Digest of Health Legislation, 1998, 49 (2). *
'This is a timely and important book...the book is of a high standard...' * Sev,S.Fluss,European Jnl of Hlth Law 5:337-339, 1998. *
ISBN: 9780195114423
Dimensions: 162mm x 242mm x 23mm
Weight: 544g
232 pages