PT - JOURNAL ARTICLE AU - Jennifer Prah Ruger TI - Good medical ethics, justice and provincial globalism AID - 10.1136/medethics-2014-102356 DP - 2015 Jan 01 TA - Journal of Medical Ethics PG - 103--106 VI - 41 IP - 1 4099 - http://jme.bmj.com/content/41/1/103.short 4100 - http://jme.bmj.com/content/41/1/103.full SO - J Med Ethics2015 Jan 01; 41 AB - The summer 2014 Ebola virus outbreak in Western Africa illustrates global health's striking inequalities. Globalisation has also increased pandemics, and disparate health system conditions mean that where one falls ill or is injured in the world can mean the difference between quality care, substandard care or no care at all, between full recovery, permanent ill effects and death. Yet attention to the normative underpinnings of global health justice and distribution remains, despite some important exceptions, inadequate in medical ethics, bioethics and political philosophy. We need a theoretical foundation on which to build a more just world. Provincial globalism (PG), grounded in capability theory, offers a foundation; it provides the components of a global health justice framework that can guide implementation. Under PG, all persons possess certain health entitlements. Global health justice requires progressively securing this health capabilities threshold for every person.