Health Promotion International Advance Access originally published online on October 29, 2008
Health Promotion International 2008 23(4):380-390; doi:10.1093/heapro/dan032
| ||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||
DEBATE |
Beyond evidence—to ethics: a decision-making framework for health promotion, public health and health improvement
NHS Health Scotland, Elphinstone House, 65 West Regent Street, Glasgow G2 2AF, Scotland, UK
* Corresponding author. E-mail: andrew.tannahill{at}health.scot.nhs.uk
| Abstract |
|---|
Echoing the rise of evidence-based medicine, the concept of evidence-based policy and practice in the inter-related fields of health promotion, public health and health improvement has attracted increasing attention over the past two decades. More recently, again with roots traceable to biomedical thinking, there has been growing interest in ethics in relation to these fields. This paper links these two topical themes in a practical way. It explores the extent to which policies and activities on the ground can and should be based on evidence, and considers the relative places of evidence and ethics in decision-making. It goes on to present the decision-making triangle, a framework that gives primacy to a set of ethical principles—with available evidence and plausible theory being used to inform the application of these. After introducing the concept of ethical logic modelling, the paper concludes by suggesting an ethical imperative for health promotion, public health and health improvement: to make decisions based on the explicit application of ethical principles, using available evidence and theory appropriately.
Key words: ethics; evidence; decision-making; health promotion; public health; health improvement
This paper has been developed from a presentation given by the author at the international conference Setting an Ethical Agenda for Health Promotion, held at the University of Ghent, Belgium from 18 to 20 September 2007 and organized by the University of Ghent (Institute for Law, Ethics and Society, and Department of Public Health) and the Flemish Institute for Health Promotion.