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. 2023 Mar 31;24(1):25.
doi: 10.1186/s12910-023-00903-2.

Severity as a moral qualifier of malady

Affiliations

Severity as a moral qualifier of malady

Carl Tollef Solberg et al. BMC Med Ethics. .

Abstract

The overarching aim of this article is to scrutinize how severity can work as a qualifier for the moral impetus of malady. While there is agreement that malady is of negative value, there is disagreement about precisely how this is so. Nevertheless, alleviating disease, injury, and associated suffering is almost universally considered good. Furthermore, the strength of a diseased person's moral claims for our attention and efforts will inevitably vary. This article starts by reflecting on what kind of moral impetus malady incites. We then analyze how severity may qualify this impetus. We do so by discussing the relationship between severity and need, well-being and disvalue, death, urgency, rule of rescue, and distributive justice. We then summarize our thoughts about severity as a moral qualifier. We conclude that severity is, and should continue to be seen, as a morally significant concept that deserves continued attention in the future.

Keywords: Decision making; Medical humanities; Philosophy; Rationing/resource allocation.

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Conflict of interest statement

None declared.

Figures

Fig. 1
Fig. 1
A Venn-diagram to illustrate the overlap between the various conceptions of severity with moral relevance

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