With respect to any residual occurrence of coercive measures,
the extent to which eradication would require them more than
would elimination and control would be a factor that
counts against eradication from the standpoint of the core social justice
framework; this is because of the adverse impacts of coercion on
agency, association, and respect. In cases in which coercive measures
would be necessary to achieve eradication, intrapersonal or
interpersonal trade-offs between protecting agency, association,
and respect (by limiting public health intervention) and more
completely averting and alleviating
clusters of disadvantage (by reducing long-term residual disease
incidence) may be inevitable.