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    Disability reduces welfare, and the more severe the disab... — Carmelics
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    Home/Bioethics
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    Supports→Utilitarianism, by relying on the greater benefit criterion of distributive justice, is the best framework for handling intuitions about disability in health care allocation.

    Disability reduces welfare, and the more severe the disability, the greater the welfare loss.

    BioethicsConsequentialism
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    BioethicsConsequentialism

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    Because of the disability-welfare relationship, utilitarianism can precisely det...Disability is conceptually related to ill-health or functional decrement (impair...Precise welfare determination makes utilitarianism a superior decision-making me...Utilitarianism, by relying on the greater benefit criterion of distributive just...

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    These broader welfare benefits linked to health improvements may overw...83%If the goal is maximizing welfare rather than health, disability may b...79%Stein's utilitarian argument for a strict disability-welfare correlati...79%Because of the disability-welfare relationship, utilitarianism can pre...78%

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    One of the most robust defenses of how the CEA approach deals with disability comes in the form of Michael Stein’s general defense of utilitarianism against forms of resource egalitarianism (Stein 2006). Stein argues that only utilitarianism, by relying on the greater benefit criterion of distributive justice, can handle our intuitions about disability when it comes to health care allocation. He acknowledges that disability is conceptually related to ill-health or functional decrement (impairmen

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