Author | Landman, Willem A. | en_US |
Author | Henley, Lesley D. | en_US |
Date Accessioned | 2011-04-15T15:47:45Z | en_US |
Date Accessioned | 2011-05-17T00:02:08Z | |
Date Available | 2011-04-15T15:47:45Z | en_US |
Date Available | 2011-05-17T00:02:08Z | |
Date of Issue | 1998-08 | en_US |
Identifier (Citation) | Journal of Medical Ethics; 24:4 p. 268-273 | en_US |
Identifier (URI) | http://hdl.handle.net/10342/3333 | en_US |
Description | The new South African constitution commits the government to guarantee "basic health services "for every child under 18. Primary health care for pregnant women and children under six and elements of essential primary health care have received priority. At present, there is little analysis of the moral considerations involved in making choices about more advanced or costly health care which may, arguably, also be "basic". This paper illustrates some of the tensions in setting priorities for a just macroallocation of children's health care, given the realities of need and scarce resources, and the commitment to equality of basic opportunities. Originally published Journal of Medical Ethics, Vol. 24, No. 4, Aug 1998 | en_US |
Language | en_US | en_US |
Publisher | East Carolina University | en_US |
Related URI | http://jme.bmj.com/content/by/year/1998 | en_US |
Rights | Author notified of opt-out rights by Cammie Jennings prior to upload of this article. | en_US |
Subject | Children | en_US |
Subject | Health care priority setting | en_US |
Subject | Justice in health care | en_US |
Subject | Macro-allocation | en_US |
Subject | South Africa | en_US |
Title | Tensions in setting health care priorities for South Africa's children. | en_US |
Type | Article | en_US |
Identifier (PMID) | PMC1377680 | en_US |