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Journal Article

Citation

Faden RR, Faden AI. Health Educ. Monogr. 1978; 6(2): 180-197.

Copyright

(Copyright © 1978, Society for Public Health Education)

DOI

unavailable

PMID

730534

Abstract

The concept of voluntariness is central to an understanding of ethical considerations in two aspects of public health education practice: (1) the selection of appropriate interventions, and (2) the selection of appropriate targets for such interventions. The position is taken that most mass communications programs in public health education are persuasive as well as informative in intent. It is argued that the impact of such programs on voluntariness can be analyzed with regard to the rationality and resistibility of the persuasive appeals involved. Considerations of justice, as well as voluntariness and liberty, are reviewed in the discussion of appropriate targets for intervention. The issue of victim-blaming in public health education is explored, and conditions under which behavioral public health programs may be morally justifiable are suggested.


Language: en

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