Publication Date
6-1-2024
Journal
Monash Bioethics Review
DOI
10.1007/s40592-024-00199-x
PMID
39003388
PMCID
PMC11368997
PubMedCentral® Posted Date
7-13-2024
PubMedCentral® Full Text Version
Post-Print
Published Open-Access
yes
Keywords
Humans, COVID-19, SARS-CoV-2, Personal Autonomy, Pandemics, Social Justice, Public Health, Informed Consent, COVID, Provider ethics, Autonomy, Distributive justice, Vaccine hesitancy, Research ethics
Abstract
COVID-19 presents a variety of ethical challenges in a set of arenas, arenas not always considered in past pandemics. These challenges include issues related to autonomy, distributive ethics, and the establishment of policies of equity and justice. Methods are a literature review based on regular editing of an online textbook during the COVID-19 outbreak and a literature review using key ethical terms. Patients are confronted with new issues related to autonomy. Providers need to expand their concepts of ethical issues to include decisions based on proportionality and public health ethics. The public health sector needs to assess the beneficence of alternative modes of disease control. The research community needs to redefine the concept of informed consent in emergent conditions. All elements of the medical spectrum-physicians, scientists, and the community-at-large including the pharmaceutical industry-need to consider the multifaceted methods for preventing future pandemics. This will require giving particular emphasis to public health funding and ending the documented discrimination that exists in the provision of proven therapies. The developing world is especially at risk for most of the ethical issues, especially those related to equity and justice. The ethical issues associated with the COVID-19 outbreak are not unique but provide a diverse set of issues that apply to patients, providers, social groups, and investigators. The further study of such issues can help with preventing future outbreaks.
Included in
Bioethics and Medical Ethics Commons, COVID-19 Commons, Epidemiology Commons, Internal Medicine Commons, Medical Sciences Commons
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