减轻食品生产中人畜共患疾病风险的公共卫生伦理案例。

Food ethics Pub Date : 2021-01-01 Epub Date: 2021-05-08 DOI:10.1007/s41055-021-00089-6
Justin Bernstein, Jan Dutkiewicz
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引用次数: 8

摘要

这篇文章认为,目前允许集约化畜牧业的国家的政府——尤其是但不完全是高收入国家——原则上在道德上有理由采取措施限制甚至消除集约化畜牧业,以保护公众健康免受人畜共患病大流行的风险。与现有的许多限制、削减甚至消除集约化动物农业的论点不同,这些论点侧重于环境危害、动物福利或动物源食品消费与非传染性疾病之间的联系,本文的论点呼吁保护人口免受未来全球卫生紧急情况及其广泛的社会、经济和健康影响的价值,以SARS-CoV-2病毒为一个特别突出的例子。本文首先确定了集约化畜牧业如何导致人畜共患疾病的爆发(以及未来爆发的风险)。接下来,我们将探讨三种具体的政策选择:通过政府补贴鼓励以植物和细胞为基础的ASF替代品;2. 通过征收“人畜共患税”来抑制非洲猪瘟的集约化生产;和3。通过全面禁止消除非洲猪瘟的集约化生产。我们认为这三种措施都是允许的,尽管我们仍然不知道这些措施是否是强制性的。我们支持这一结论的理由是,每一项措施的合理性都与其他被广泛接受的公共卫生干预措施的合理性有同样的考虑,而且每一项措施都与各种正义理论相容。然后我们处理潜在的反对意见。最后,我们讨论了我们的新论点如何与支持或限制非洲猪瘟生产和消费的现有伦理论点相关联。
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A Public Health Ethics Case for Mitigating Zoonotic Disease Risk in Food Production.

This article argues that governments in countries that currently permit intensive animal agriculture - especially but not exclusively high-income countries - are, in principle, morally justified in taking steps to restrict or even eliminate intensive animal agriculture to protect public health from the risk of zoonotic pandemics. Unlike many extant arguments for restricting, curtailing, or even eliminating intensive animal agriculture which focus on environmental harms, animal welfare, or the link between animal source food (ASF) consumption and noncommunicable disease, the argument in this article appeals to the value of protecting populations from future global health emergencies and their broad social, economic, and health impacts, taking the SARS-CoV-2 virus as a particularly salient example. The article begins by identifying how intensive animal agriculture contributes to the outbreak (and risk of future outbreaks) of zoonotic diseases. Next, we explore three specific policy options: 1. Incentivizing plant-based and cell-based ASF alternatives through government subsidies; 2. Disincentivizing intensive ASF production through the adoption of a "zoonotic tax"; and 3. Eliminating intensive ASF production through a total ban. We argue that all three of these measures are permissible, although we remain agnostic as to whether these measures are obligatory. We argue for this conclusion on the grounds that each measure is justified by the same sorts of considerations that justify other widely accepted public health interventions, and each is compatible with a variety of theories of justice. We then address potential objections. Finally, we discuss how our novel argument relates to extant ethical arguments in favor or curtailing ASF production and consumption.

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