The relevance of ethics in the European Union’s second public health programme

Aim: The objective of this paper was to investigate whether ethical values were explicitly identified in the Second Public Health Programme (2008-2013) of the European Commission. Methods: A qualitative case study methodology of exploratory nature was followed. The data used were the summaries of...

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Main Author: Nelly K. Otenyo
Format: Article
Language:English
Published: Jacobs Verlag 2017-03-01
Series:South Eastern European Journal of Public Health
Subjects:
Online Access:https://www.seejph.com/index.php/seejph/article/view/1845
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spelling doaj-8403a4c061014facb96fce12560235fd2020-11-25T02:11:24ZengJacobs VerlagSouth Eastern European Journal of Public Health2197-52482017-03-0110.4119/seejph-1845The relevance of ethics in the European Union’s second public health programmeNelly K. Otenyo Aim: The objective of this paper was to investigate whether ethical values were explicitly identified in the Second Public Health Programme (2008-2013) of the European Commission. Methods: A qualitative case study methodology of exploratory nature was followed. The data used were the summaries of the project proposals and Public Health Programme objectives and was retrieved from the publicly available Consumers, Health and Food Executive Agency database. Since the PHP was finalized during the study, the study only focused on the summaries of the fifty-five finalized project proposals while excluding the ongoing projects and those projects at the reporting stage. The full proposals for the projects are confidential and thus could not be retrieved. However, the project summaries were inarguably sufficient to conduct the study. Using a table, a content analysis method in addition to the ethical framework, was applied in order to analyze and categorise the project findings. Results: The results unfold that, out of the seven ethical principles, only ‘equity’ and ‘efficiency’ were explicitly considered in eighteen projects and four projects respectively. Moreover, from the shared health values, eight projects identified aspects pertaining to ‘accessibility to quality health care’ while ‘solidarity’ was only discussed in one project. Lastly, the ethical aspects ‘ethics’ and ‘values’ were identified in three projects and in one project respectively. Conclusions: From the results, there is a limited consideration of ethical principles within the projects. Therefore, future public health programmes could use this as an opportunity to emphasis on the inclusion and application of ethical principles in public health projects.     https://www.seejph.com/index.php/seejph/article/view/1845accessibility for quality health careefficiencyequityrespect for human dignityuniversality.
collection DOAJ
language English
format Article
sources DOAJ
author Nelly K. Otenyo
spellingShingle Nelly K. Otenyo
The relevance of ethics in the European Union’s second public health programme
South Eastern European Journal of Public Health
accessibility for quality health care
efficiency
equity
respect for human dignity
universality.
author_facet Nelly K. Otenyo
author_sort Nelly K. Otenyo
title The relevance of ethics in the European Union’s second public health programme
title_short The relevance of ethics in the European Union’s second public health programme
title_full The relevance of ethics in the European Union’s second public health programme
title_fullStr The relevance of ethics in the European Union’s second public health programme
title_full_unstemmed The relevance of ethics in the European Union’s second public health programme
title_sort relevance of ethics in the european union’s second public health programme
publisher Jacobs Verlag
series South Eastern European Journal of Public Health
issn 2197-5248
publishDate 2017-03-01
description Aim: The objective of this paper was to investigate whether ethical values were explicitly identified in the Second Public Health Programme (2008-2013) of the European Commission. Methods: A qualitative case study methodology of exploratory nature was followed. The data used were the summaries of the project proposals and Public Health Programme objectives and was retrieved from the publicly available Consumers, Health and Food Executive Agency database. Since the PHP was finalized during the study, the study only focused on the summaries of the fifty-five finalized project proposals while excluding the ongoing projects and those projects at the reporting stage. The full proposals for the projects are confidential and thus could not be retrieved. However, the project summaries were inarguably sufficient to conduct the study. Using a table, a content analysis method in addition to the ethical framework, was applied in order to analyze and categorise the project findings. Results: The results unfold that, out of the seven ethical principles, only ‘equity’ and ‘efficiency’ were explicitly considered in eighteen projects and four projects respectively. Moreover, from the shared health values, eight projects identified aspects pertaining to ‘accessibility to quality health care’ while ‘solidarity’ was only discussed in one project. Lastly, the ethical aspects ‘ethics’ and ‘values’ were identified in three projects and in one project respectively. Conclusions: From the results, there is a limited consideration of ethical principles within the projects. Therefore, future public health programmes could use this as an opportunity to emphasis on the inclusion and application of ethical principles in public health projects.    
topic accessibility for quality health care
efficiency
equity
respect for human dignity
universality.
url https://www.seejph.com/index.php/seejph/article/view/1845
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