The COVID-19 pandemic provides the opportunity to re-think health policies and health systems approaches by the adoption of a biopsychosocial perspective, thus acting on environmental factors so as to increase facilitators and diminish barriers. Specifically, vulnerable people should not face discrimination because of their vulnerability in the allocation of care or life-sustaining treatments. Adoption of biopsychosocial model helps to identify key elements where to act to diminish effects of the pandemics. The pandemic showed us that barriers in health care organization affect mostly those that are vulnerable and can suffer discrimination not because of severity of diseases but just because of their vulnerability, be this age or disability and this can be avoided by biopsychosocial planning in health and social policies. It is possible to avoid the banality of evil, intended as lack of thinking on what we do when we do, by using the emergence of the emergency of COVID-19 as a Trojan horse to achieve some of the sustainable development goals such as universal health coverage and equity in access, thus acting on environmental factors is the key for global health improvement.
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http://dx.doi.org/10.1007/s42399-020-00486-8 | DOI Listing |
Lancet
November 2024
Institut de Génomique Fonctionnelle and Department of Emergency Psychiatry and Acute Care, Hospital Center, Université de Montpellier, Montpellier 34295, France; The National Center for Scientific Research, Montpellier, France; The National Institute of Health and Medical Research, Montpellier, France. Electronic address:
Creat Nurs
August 2024
Nursing Department, University of Applied Sciences Kärnten, Klagenfurt, Austria.
This article explores nursing, patient records, and ideology within the context of the National Socialist "euthanasia" program ( T4) in Germany and Austria from 1939 to 1941, which targeted individuals with mental and physical disabilities for systematic killing. Using Hannah Arendt's concept of the "banality of evil," it examines how ordinary individuals, including nurses, became agents of atrocity by adhering to bureaucratic orders. Jacques Ellul's Ethics of Technology framework is employed to analyze how National Socialist ideology manipulated technological processes to enhance efficiency in genocidal goals.
View Article and Find Full Text PDFRecenti Prog Med
January 2023
Medico anestesista rianimatore.
In early November the Italian government, after having prevented two NGO ships with 751 migrants on board from docking in the port of Catania, allowed disembarkation only to migrants in critical health conditions, refusing it to others and ordering then to the ships to set sail. This episode, the latest in a series started in Italy between 2018 and 2019 during the previous right-wing government, is part of a sovereignist ideal and political framework, while the racist tendencies are clearly growing up in the country long ago. The event referred to and the social and political climate in which it took place evokes the theme of banality of evil about which Hannah Arendt and Primo Levi have written after the experience personally lived during the Nuremberg trial by the first author and in the Auschwitz killing field by the second one.
View Article and Find Full Text PDFInt J Psychoanal
October 2022
British Psychoanalytical Society, London, UK.
It is suggested in this paper that in the Shoah one is confronted with the abolition of the Law of the Dead Father and the re-establishing of the tyranny of the narcissistic father. In the extermination of the Jews of Europe in the Shoah, the aim was the destruction of the rules of genealogy and filiation to both mother and father that establish the social and give rise to personhood and are at the core of the oedipal structure. The rule of absolute power - the destruction of any sense of maternal care and paternal rules - leads ultimately to the creation of the abject.
View Article and Find Full Text PDFSN Compr Clin Med
September 2020
CanChild - Centre for Childhood Disability Research, McMaster University, Hamilton, Ontario Canada.
The COVID-19 pandemic provides the opportunity to re-think health policies and health systems approaches by the adoption of a biopsychosocial perspective, thus acting on environmental factors so as to increase facilitators and diminish barriers. Specifically, vulnerable people should not face discrimination because of their vulnerability in the allocation of care or life-sustaining treatments. Adoption of biopsychosocial model helps to identify key elements where to act to diminish effects of the pandemics.
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