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KMID : 0986720200280010151
Korean Journal of Medicine and Law
2020 Volume.28 No. 1 p.151 ~ p.172
Constitutional Interpretation of Infectious Disease Patients as a Sociological Meaning of Medical Culture
Kim Eun-Ill

Abstract
In the past, health and sickness of individual members of society have been more accountable to individuals, but modern society places more weight on social responsibility as well as individual responsibility. It means that the whole society is healthy only when the members of society are healthy. Thus, interest in public health, public health, is also increasing. Among them, infectious diseases are closely related to social phenomena from the past, and have a significant connection in recognizing and establishing the concept of public health. And in the modern society, social events about infectious diseases continue to be noticed. In this series of social phenomena, the recognition of infectious patients and the ways of responding to infectious diseases are increasing compared to the past, while the medical treatment is increasing and social perception and prejudice are not much different from the past. Everyone in society has the potential to be infected at any time. Thus, most members of society may have fears and prejudices about infectious diseases. However, while being infected with an infectious disease may be a short-term temporary condition, there are cases of chronic infectious diseases that require long-term treatment and rehabilitation. Because infectious diseases can transmit infectious diseases to others, they are suffering from social constraints and reduced economic capacity. Therefore, these infectious patients are trying to form a medical culture that seeks solutions in the culture by expanding awareness of social responsibility. Thus, there is a need to discuss the search for alternatives to social responsibility in the subordinate concept of infectious patients as socially underprivileged.
KEYWORD
Infectious diseases, disabled people, medical culture, social security, social underprivilege
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