Health care and Rawls’s theory of justice Singapore : a case study
The principles of distributive justice instruct the proportioning of finite public resources and can be used to legitimize a particular social arrangement. This paper seeks to evaluate whether the distribution of health care resources (quality, cost, freedom of choice) in Singapore is just. It begin...
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sg-ntu-dr.10356-697282019-12-10T11:42:53Z Health care and Rawls’s theory of justice Singapore : a case study Soh, Ming Li Christopher Holman School of Humanities and Social Sciences DRNTU::Social sciences The principles of distributive justice instruct the proportioning of finite public resources and can be used to legitimize a particular social arrangement. This paper seeks to evaluate whether the distribution of health care resources (quality, cost, freedom of choice) in Singapore is just. It begins with a review of John Rawls’s seminal work A Theory of Justice, which forms the foundational model of justice for this inquiry, and an examination of the uniqueness of health care as a social good. Two features of the Singapore health care system, the Community Health Assist Scheme (CHAS) and the Medisave-Medishield-Medifund (3M) financing framework, are then discussed and evaluated for the extent to which they improve systemic justice in health care. A brief comparison is made with two other models of health care financing: the free market and egalitarian models. Bachelor of Arts 2017-03-24T04:22:05Z 2017-03-24T04:22:05Z 2017 Final Year Project (FYP) http://hdl.handle.net/10356/69728 en Nanyang Technological University 38 p. application/pdf |
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DRNTU::Social sciences Soh, Ming Li Health care and Rawls’s theory of justice Singapore : a case study |
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The principles of distributive justice instruct the proportioning of finite public resources and can be used to legitimize a particular social arrangement. This paper seeks to evaluate whether the distribution of health care resources (quality, cost, freedom of choice) in Singapore is just. It begins with a review of John Rawls’s seminal work A Theory of Justice, which forms the foundational model of justice for this inquiry, and an examination of the uniqueness of health care as a social good. Two features of the Singapore health care system, the Community Health Assist Scheme (CHAS) and the Medisave-Medishield-Medifund (3M) financing framework, are then discussed and evaluated for the extent to which they improve systemic justice in health care. A brief comparison is made with two other models of health care financing: the free market and egalitarian models. |
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Christopher Holman |
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Christopher Holman Soh, Ming Li |
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Final Year Project |
author |
Soh, Ming Li |
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Soh, Ming Li |
title |
Health care and Rawls’s theory of justice Singapore : a case study |
title_short |
Health care and Rawls’s theory of justice Singapore : a case study |
title_full |
Health care and Rawls’s theory of justice Singapore : a case study |
title_fullStr |
Health care and Rawls’s theory of justice Singapore : a case study |
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Health care and Rawls’s theory of justice Singapore : a case study |
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health care and rawls’s theory of justice singapore : a case study |
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2017 |
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http://hdl.handle.net/10356/69728 |
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1681040546401878016 |