Section: Module 5: Lesson 2: Essentials of Public Health and Policy | Medical Ethics Online | NextGenU.org

  • Student Learning Outcomes:
    Upon completion of this lesson, you will be able to:
    • Describe key concepts relevant to public health and policy. 
    • Understand how ethical reasoning relates to public health.

    Click here to start this lesson

    • Required Learning Resources and Activities
    • Read the entire content. (29 minutes)

      National Library of Medicine - 2023

    • Read the entire content. (22 minutes)

      National Library of Medicine - 2018

    • Read the entire content. (40 minutes)

      National Library of Medicine - 2021

    • Read the entire content. (16 minutes)

      Journal of Comprehensive Health - 2024

    • Read the entire content. (10 minutes)

      Health 1010

    • Read the entire content. (3 minutes)

      Scientific Integrity at CDC - 2025

    • General Instructions: In this activity, you will demonstrate your understanding of healthcare systems and public health ethics through critical analysis of resource allocation, justice, equity, and ethical policy decision-making in healthcare organization and public health contexts.

      Step 1: Review Lesson Summary

      Review Module 5 Lesson Summary to prepare for this activity, focusing on:

      • "Healthcare Systems: Core Goals and Functions" – primary healthcare system goals (health improvement, financial protection, responsiveness), key healthcare system functions (stewardship, financing, service delivery, resource generation), and healthcare system typologies

      • "Justice and Equity in Healthcare" – distributive justice theories (egalitarian, utilitarian, libertarian, Rawlsian), equity versus equality, and social determinants of health

      • "Resource Allocation and Prioritization" – the problem of scarcity, ethical frameworks for resource allocation (utilitarian, prioritarian, fair innings, rule of rescue), and ethical considerations in prioritization

      • "Public Health Ethics and Policy" – scope of public health ethics, balancing individual liberty and collective good, and contemporary public health challenges

      • "Key Concepts in Public Health and Policy" – population health perspective and evidence-based policy making

      Step 2: Critical Analysis and Response

      Read the following policy scenario:

      A regional health authority facing budget constraints must choose between two programs, each costing $2.5 million annually:

      Option A: A mobile primary care clinic serving three rural underserved communities (population 15,000), providing preventive care, chronic disease management, and vaccinations. The program would serve 8,000 patients annually and reduce emergency visits by 30%.

      Option B: A specialized stroke center at the regional hospital serving the entire region (population 250,000), directly benefiting 150-200 stroke patients annually with life-saving interventional care.

      Rural communities argue they face health disparities and have been historically underserved. Stroke advocacy groups argue specialized care is a fundamental life-saving need. The health authority must decide within 30 days.

      Based on your readings from the Module 5 Lesson Summary, compose a 700-900 word response addressing the following:

      1. Health Systems Goals, Functions, and Ethical Considerations (250-300 words)

      • Introduce and explain the core health systems goals relevant to this scenario, including improving health outcomes, ensuring financial protection, promoting equity, and enhancing efficiency

      • Describe the key health systems functions involved in this decision, including service delivery, resource allocation, and governance/leadership

      • Present and explore critical ethical considerations for advancing health system goals in policy and practice, with particular emphasis on questions of justice, including:

        • Distributive justice (fair allocation of limited resources)

        • Equity (addressing disparities and ensuring equal access)

        • Utilitarianism (greatest good for greatest number)

        • Prioritarianism (priority to the worst-off)

      • Apply these ethical frameworks to analyze the tension between the two programs: compare the ethical arguments for prioritizing primary care in underserved communities versus specialized life-saving services

      2. Public Health Concepts and Ethical Reasoning (250-300 words)

      • Describe key concepts relevant to public health and policy that apply to this scenario, including population health, health equity, social determinants of health, prevention versus treatment, and evidence-based policy

      • Explain how ethical reasoning relates to public health priorities and differs from clinical ethics (focus on populations vs. individuals, prevention vs. treatment, collective good vs. individual needs)

      • Discuss the ethical principles that guide public health policy decision-making, including maximizing benefits, distributing burdens and benefits fairly, and procedural justice (fair, transparent decision-making processes)

      • Analyze how the concept of "health equity" specifically applies to this case, considering that rural communities face structural barriers to healthcare access and have worse health outcomes

      3. Ethical Evaluation and Policy Recommendation (200-250 words)

      • Critically evaluate the ethical strengths and weaknesses of each option:

        • Option A (Primary Care): Strengths and limitations from an ethical perspective

        • Option B (Stroke Center): Strengths and limitations from an ethical perspective

      • Provide a reasoned policy recommendation, explaining which program should be funded and why, using ethical frameworks to justify your decision

      • Discuss how the health authority should approach procedural justice in this decision, including stakeholder engagement, transparency, and accountability

      • Address whether there are alternative approaches that might partially address both needs or mitigate the harms of choosing one over the other

      Your response should demonstrate integration of health systems knowledge with ethical frameworks, critical analysis of justice and equity issues, and practical application of ethical reasoning to public health policy decision-making based on the Module 5 Lesson Summary.

      Step 3: Submit

      Submit your response through the course platform. Prepare your work as a Google Document or Word document, then upload or paste your complete response into the assignment submission area. Make sure to reference others' intellectual property when necessary. All references should follow 7th Edition APA formatting. For further instructions, see the resource on the Himmelfarb Health Sciences Library: APA citation resource (N.B.: references are excluded from word counts).

    • quiz icon
      Quiz: Module 5

      To access the quiz, click on the name of the quiz provided above. On the following screen, click the attempt quiz button to view the case studies and respond to the questions.

      TO PASS THIS QUIZ YOU MUST OBTAIN A SCORE OF 80%.

      Not available unless: The activity Quiz: Module 4 is marked complete
    • Recommended Additional Readings
    • (1 hour 41 minutes)

      LibreTexts Health

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      National Library of Medicine - 2025