Bridging ethics and epidemiology: Modelling ethical standards of health equity

Health inequities are differences in health that are ‘unjust’. Yet, despite competing ethical views about what counts as an ‘unjust difference in health’, theoretical insights from ethics have not been systematically integrated into epidemiological research. Using diabetes as an example, we explore...

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Veröffentlicht in:SSM - population health 2023-12, Vol.24, p.101481-101481, Article 101481
Hauptverfasser: Smith, Brendan T., Warren, Christine M., Rosella, Laura C., Smith, Maxwell J.
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Sprache:eng
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Zusammenfassung:Health inequities are differences in health that are ‘unjust’. Yet, despite competing ethical views about what counts as an ‘unjust difference in health’, theoretical insights from ethics have not been systematically integrated into epidemiological research. Using diabetes as an example, we explore the impact of adopting different ethical standards of health equity on population health outcomes. Specifically, we explore how the implementation of population-level weight-loss interventions using different ethical standards of equity impacts the intervention's implementation and resultant population health outcomes. We conducted a risk prediction modelling study using the nationally representative 2015-16 Canadian Community Health Survey (n = 75,044, 54% women). We used the Diabetes Population Risk Tool (DPoRT) to calculate individual-level 10-year diabetes risk. Hypothetical weight-loss interventions were modelled in individuals with overweight or obesity based on each ethical standard: 1) health sufficiency (reduce DPoRT risk below a high-risk threshold (16.5%); 2) health equality (equalize DPoRT risk to the low risk group (5%)); 3) social-health sufficiency (reduce DPoRT risk
ISSN:2352-8273
2352-8273
DOI:10.1016/j.ssmph.2023.101481