Human dignity requires that economic systems and work never demand the sacrifice of physical health or basic medical care.
Zera Yacob insisted that dignity is inherent and universal, not earned through wealth or productivity. Applied to poverty and health, this means recognizing that low wages forcing people to skip meals or avoid doctors are violations of dignity, not personal failures. Many poor people face impossible trade-offs: pay rent or buy medicine, feed children or seek preventive care. Yacob's framework rejects the moral logic that permits such choices. Instead, it establishes dignity as a standard: an economy where people must choose between survival needs is fundamentally unjust. This concept reframes health poverty not as individual misfortune but as systematic dignity violation. It challenges the invisibility of poverty-related illness and positions health access as a dignity demand, not charity.
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