Health Disparities
Research Ethics
Global Health
Reproductive Justice
Resource Allocation
100

This term describes differences in health outcomes that are avoidable, unfair, and unjust.

What are health inequities?

100

This historical study that ended in 1972 became a key example of racial injustice in medical research.

What is the Tuskegee Syphilis Study?

100

This term refers to wealthy countries obtaining far more vaccines than needed.

What is vaccine hoarding?

100

This landmark 1973 Supreme Court case established a federal right to abortion (and was later overturned).

What is Roe v. Wade?

100

This type of care rationing assigns scarce resources based on urgency and chance of recovery.

What is medical triage?


Used especially during emergencies, the sickest who can benefit the most are treated first.

200

Black women in the U.S. are three to four times more likely to die from this medical event compared to white women.

What is childbirth (maternal mortality)?

200

The Principle within the Belmont Report which requires a fair distribution of benefits and burdens.
 

What is justice?

200

The idea that all people deserve the highest attainable standard of health.

What is the right to health?


This includes safe housing, clean water, and access to medical care not just medicine.

200

A framework developed by Black feminists focusing on the right to have or not have children and parent safely.

What is reproductive justice?

200

During COVID-19, using age, disability, or social worth to deny care violated this ethical principle.

What is fairness or non-discrimination?

300

Lack of transportation, insurance, or access to providers are just a few examples of these non-medical factors that shape health.

What are social determinants of health?


These are conditions in someone’s environment that affect their health like where they live, work, and go to school.

300

Henrietta Lacks' cells were taken without this type of permission, which is now a requirement in research.

What is informed consent?

300

This organization sets global health guidelines and declared COVID-19 a pandemic.

What is the World Health Organization (WHO)?


The WHO responds to global outbreaks and helps countries build health systems.

300

Indigenous, Black, and disabled women were disproportionately targeted by this unethical practice in the 20th century.

What is forced sterilization?


States and hospitals performed surgeries to stop people from having children without their consent.

300

Allocating resources to those most likely to benefit reflects this ethical framework.

What is utilitarianism?


This approach tries to maximize total good or save the most lives.

400

This landmark 1966 article exposed the unequal treatment of Black patients in Southern hospitals.

What is the Tuskegee Study or “Racial Differences in Hospital Care”?

400

These boards oversee human research to ensure ethical protections.

What are Institutional Review Boards (IRBs)?


IRBs check if studies are safe, fair, and respectful before they begin.

400

Programs that use low-cost labor or test drugs in poorer countries without long-term community benefit are accused of this ethical violation.

What is exploitation?

400

Barriers to birth control access in low-income communities are examples of this injustice.

What is contraceptive inequity?

400

This problem occurs when marginalized patients receive lower-quality care because of structural barriers.

What is systemic bias or structural racism?

500

This federal policy prohibits discrimination in healthcare programs receiving federal funding. 

(Title ___) 

What is Title VI of the Civil Rights Act?


Title VI makes it illegal for any federally funded hospital or clinic to treat people differently because of race, color, or national origin.

500

This concept describes how historically marginalized groups are over-studied in risky research but under-included in beneficial trials.

What is exploitation or inequitable subject selection?


Example: poor communities being used to test drugs, but not getting access once those drugs are approved.

500

This term refers to the reproduction of global inequalities in health research and healthcare, often between the Global North and South.

What is structural global injustice?


Examples: rich countries controlling patents, drug prices, or who gets new treatments first.

500

This unethical practice involves making assumptions about a patient’s reproductive choices based on race, class, or disability.

What is reproductive coercion or bias?

500

Policies that ensure equal access to organs for transplant are guided by this ethical principle.

What is justice (or distributive justice)?


Transplants must be given fairly not based on wealth, race, or status.