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An Ounce for Prevention… Germany’s Public Policy on Health Promotion and Disease Prevention
Published online by Cambridge University Press: 20 January 2017
Abstract
This section discusses the regulation of “lifestyle risks” a term that can apply to both substances and behaviours. Lifestyle risks take place along the line of “abstinence - consumption - abuse - addiction”. This can concern substances such as food, alcohol or drugs, as well as behaviours such as gambling or sports. The section also addresses the question of the appropriate point of equilibrium between free choice and state intervention (regulation), as well as the question of when risks can be considered to be acceptable or tolerable. In line with the interdisciplinary scope of the journal, the section aims at updating readers on both the regulatory and the scientific developments in the field. It analyses legislative initiatives and judicial decisions and at the same time it provides insight into recent empirical studies on lifestyle risks.
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References
1- “Act on enhancing health promotion and prevention”.
2- BGBl.I S. 1368.
3- There are many useful studies in public health on that. For comprehensive overviews see especially for the U.S. Freudenberg, Nicholas, Lethal but legal: corporations, consumption, and protecting public health (New York: Oxford University Press, 2014) Google Scholar, and for Europe and the US Vogel, David, The Politics of Precaution. Regulating Health, Safety, and Environmental Risks in Europe and the United States (Princeton: Princeton University Press, 2012)CrossRefGoogle Scholar.
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19- The following concentrates on qualitative characteristics. For information purposes: with the PrävG the budget for prevention policy has been increased by 35 million Euro.
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