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E-raamat: Bioethics from the Global South

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  • Formaat: PDF+DRM
  • Sari: Advancing Global Bioethics 21
  • Ilmumisaeg: 16-Jan-2025
  • Kirjastus: Springer International Publishing AG
  • Keel: eng
  • ISBN-13: 9783031776694
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  • Formaat: PDF+DRM
  • Sari: Advancing Global Bioethics 21
  • Ilmumisaeg: 16-Jan-2025
  • Kirjastus: Springer International Publishing AG
  • Keel: eng
  • ISBN-13: 9783031776694

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This book tackles complex global issues like vaccination, climate change, environmental ethics, embryo adoption, and surrogate motherhood viewed from the perspective of the global south. The COVID-19 pandemic has emphasized the need for addressing bioethical issues on a global scale, beyond national and regional boundaries. Challenges highlighted in the book include cultural differences, multi-pluralism, insufficient funding, and limited opportunities for awareness and provision of education in global bioethics, particularly in low and middle-income countries. The book employs universal and global bioethics frameworks, referencing the Universal Declaration of Human Rights and the UNESCO Universal Declaration on Bioethics and Human Rights. These documents, along with other international agreements and national constitutions were used to advocate for human dignity, health, and fundamental freedoms. Contributions from authors in Kenya, Uganda, and Nigeria provide valuable perspectives, making this book a must-read for ethicists, bioethicists, medical students, and healthcare workers with an interest in global bioethics.

1 Vaccines: The Emerging and Reemerging Bioethical Dilemmas This Global
Pandemic.- 2 ADHERENCE TO THE STANDARD OPERATING PROCEDURES (SOPs) TO PREVENT
SPREAD OF COVID 19 IN NAKAWA DIVISION, KCCA UGANDA REALITY OR MYTH? AN
EXPLORATORY STUDY.- 3 BIOETHICS OF ACCESSTO COVID 19 VACCINES.- 4 RESTRICTED
PATIENT RIGHTS AND AUTONOMY IN THE FACE OF COVID 19.- 5 ENVIRONMENTAL ETHICS:
A KENYAN PERSPECTIVE.- 6 Bioethics and One Health: Beyond Anthropocentrism.-
7 Moral limitations and the right to reproduce in the Kenyan Law: Is Kenya
ready for legalization of abortion?.- 8 ETHICAL AND LEGAL PERSPECTIVES OF
SURROGACY IN DEVELOPED AND SUB SAHARAN COUNTRIES CASE OF AUSTRALIA AND
KENYA.- 9 ETHICS OF SURROGACY: A REVIEW OF THE AFRICAN PERSPECTIVE.- 10
Ethical and legal issues on embryo adoption and surrogate motherhood: a
Kenyan perspective.- 11 Possible Violations, Exploitation and Abuses of
Surrogates in Kenya: Need for Legislative Framework.- 12 Medical Migration in
Africa: Stemming the Tide of Brain Drain.
Lillian Omutoko holds a bachelors degree in education and a masters degree in educational administration from the University of Nairobi, a PhD degree in educational administration and leadership from Catholic University of Eastern Africa, a postgraduate diploma in Health Research Ethics from Stellenbosch University, a masters degree in Global Bioethics from Anahuac University, and a certificate in Responsible Conduct in International Research from the University of Washington. Lillian is an Associate Professor at the Department of Educational Management, Policy and Curriculum Studies, University of Nairobi. She is an Educationist and a Bioethicist. She has been in the Bioethics field for the last 14 years and has a  keen interest in health Research Ethics, Research Integrity, and pandemic ethics.   Lillian has been part of the collaborative team supporting the setting up of Hospital Ethics Committees in Kenya. She participated in developing a training guide for Research Ethics Committee members, facilitated numerous trainings in Africa, and developed ethical guidelines in response to the COVID-19 Pandemic in Kenya.   She is a member of the National Scientific Ethics Research Committee and Kenyatta National Hospital-University of Nairobi Ethics Research Committee (KNH-UoN ERC). She was previously the Secretary of the Bioethics Society of Kenya (BSK), a member of the International Association of Ethics Education (IAEE), and the Vice-Chairperson of the Research Ethics Association of Southern Africa (REASA).





Walter Jaoko holds a bachelors degree in medicine and a PhD degree in medical microbiology from the University of Nairobi, a masters degree in Tropical Medicine from Liverpool School of Tropical Medicine, a postgraduate diploma in Health Research Ethics from Stellenbosch University as a Fogarty Scholar, and a masters degree in Global Bioethics from Anahuac University. He is also a Fellow of the Africa Academy of Sciences. Walter is a physician and professor of Medical Microbiology and Tropical Medicine, the Director of the KAVI-Institute of Clinical Research (KAVI-ICR), at the University of Nairobi, an Extraordinary Professor of Medicine at Stellenbosch University, and a Visiting Professor at the School of Public Health, University of Alabama at Birmingham. He has conducted clinical research for the past 30 years in various aspects of infectious diseases. He also has an interest in health research ethics and the promotion of ethical standards in the conduct of health research in developing countries. In this regard, he has conducted training in research ethics in Kenya, Uganda, Tanzania, Rwanda, and Botswana, and serves as a research ethics committee member at Strathmore University, a private university in Nairobi.