Grace Advertising & Consulting, Inc.

March 2026 Issue

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a cce s s H ea l t h N ews . n e t M a rc h 2 0 2 6 Volume 11 | Issue No. 104 11 By treating someone as a means to an end, we make them into a tool to accomplish our goals without allowing them a say in what happens to them. When surveyed about thought experiments, most people are, predictably, much less favorable of choices which use a person as a means to an end. At last, we seem to have an answer for our earlier question: What does it mean to say all people have value? No one should be treated as a means to an end. We are all ends unto ourselves; we are all worthwhile goals. Naturally, with our answer comes a hundred new questions. What does that mean for politics? For medicine? Surely, if health care is all about taking care of people, then it must never treat people as a means to an end. Well, as a quick review of the infamous Tuskegee Experiments will tell you (among a thousand other cases of doctors and scientists using the bodies of people of color in appalling ways), that's unfortunately not the case. From policy to practice, medicine still fails to avoid treating people as a means. Now, reproductive health care is at the epicenter of this failure. Facing red tape around many kinds of contraceptives, ignored in favor of the husband's wishes, and increasingly unable to easily access abortion care, anyone with a uterus is at constant risk of being reduced from a person to a means of birthing. If we want to find common ground and work together to create change, to make the world a better place, we have to start with understanding why we believe what we believe. Everyone matters. Everyone deserves a better world, and that world starts with us working together to make it better.

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