ABSTRACT
PURPOSE OF REVIEW: The world has seen a major upturn in international terror awareness. Medicine has had to respond. In addition to the unique physical and mental injuries caused by terror which require special clinical attention, so too terror represents a challenge for medicine from an ethics perspective. RECENT FINDINGS: Several responses in the literature over the past few years have attempted to reflect where the battlefront of ethical dilemmas falls. These include issues of resource allocation, triage, bioterror, the therapeutic relationship with terrorists, dual loyalty, and challenges in the role in the promotion of virtuous behavior as a physician under difficult conditions. SUMMARY: Although many challenges exist, physicians need to be prepared for ethical response to terror. With their associated unique status, providing legitimacy and specialized ability in the management and approach to terror situations, physicians are held to a higher standard and need to rise to the occasion. This is required in order to promote ethical behavior under trying conditions and ethical sensitivity of the medical profession by means of being attuned to the reality around.
Subject(s)
Bioterrorism/ethics , Mass Casualty Incidents/ethics , Physicians/ethics , Resource Allocation/ethics , Triage/ethics , Clinical Protocols/standards , Humans , Personnel Loyalty , Practice Guidelines as Topic , Resource Allocation/standards , Triage/standardsABSTRACT
Disasters are unpredictable and often result in mass casualties. Limited medical resources often affect the response to mass casualty incidents, undermining the ability of responders to adequately protect all of the casualties. Thus, the injuries of casualties are classified in hopes of fully utilizing medical resources efficiently in order to save the maximum possible number of people. However, as opinions on casualty prioritization are subjective, disagreements and disputes often arise regarding allocating medical resources. The present article focused on the 2015 explosion at Formosa Fun Coast, a recreational water park in Bali, New Taipei City, Taiwan as a way to explore the dilemma over the triage and resource allocation for casualties with burns over 90% and 50-60% of their bodies. The principles of utilitarianism and deontology in Western medicine were used to discuss the reasons and rationale behind the allocation of medical resources during this incident. Confucianism, a philosophical mindset that significantly influences Taiwanese society today, was then discussed to describe the "miracles" that happened during the incident, including the acquisition of assistance from the public and medical professionals. External supplies and professional help (social resources) were provided voluntarily after this incident, which had a profound impact on both the immediate response and the longer-term recovery efforts.
Subject(s)
Mass Casualty Incidents/ethics , Resource Allocation/ethics , Humans , TaiwanABSTRACT
Disaster Victim Identification (DVI) is a triangle, the components of which are secular law, religious law and custom and professional methods. In cases of single non-criminal deaths, identification often rests with a hospital or a medical authority. When dealing with criminal or mass death incidents, the law, in many jurisdictions, assigns identification to the coroner/medical examiner, who typically uses professional methods and only answers the religious requirements of the deceased's next-of-kin according to his personal judgment. This article discusses religious considerations regarding scientific methods and their limitations, as well as the ethical issues involved in the government coroner/medical examiner's becoming involved in clarifying and answering the next-of-kin's religious requirements.
Subject(s)
Coroners and Medical Examiners/ethics , Coroners and Medical Examiners/legislation & jurisprudence , Crime Victims/legislation & jurisprudence , Disaster Victims/legislation & jurisprudence , Forensic Anthropology/ethics , Forensic Anthropology/legislation & jurisprudence , Mass Casualty Incidents/ethics , Mass Casualty Incidents/legislation & jurisprudence , Religion and Medicine , Cooperative Behavior , Cultural Competency/ethics , Ethics, Medical , Forensic Medicine/ethics , Forensic Medicine/legislation & jurisprudence , Funeral Rites , Humans , Interdisciplinary Communication , Islam , Israel , JudaismABSTRACT
A catastrophe of the magnitude of the earthquake and tsunami that hit Chile not long ago, forces us to raise some questions that we will try to answer from a philosophical, ethical and responsibility viewpoints. An analysis of the basic principles of bioethics is also justified. A natural catastrophe is not, by itself, moral or immoral, fair or unfair. However, its consequences could certainly be regarded as such, depending on whether they could have been prevented or mitigated. We will identify those individuals, who have the ethical responsibility to attend the victims and the ethical principles that must guide the tasks of healthcare and psychological support teams. The minimal indispensable actions to obtain an adequate social and legal protection of vulnerable people, must be defined according to international guidelines. These reflections are intended to improve the responsibility of the State and all the community, to efficiently prevent and repair the material and psychological consequences of such a catastrophe.
Subject(s)
Disaster Medicine/ethics , Mass Casualty Incidents/ethics , Chile , Disaster Medicine/legislation & jurisprudence , Disaster Planning , Earthquakes , Humans , Mass Casualty Incidents/legislation & jurisprudence , Social ResponsibilityABSTRACT
The authors of this article include the professor and most of the students in a doctoral course on marriage and family therapy ethical and professional issues that met the semester that a disturbed student shot and killed 32 Virginia Tech students and faculty before killing himself. In this article, we reflect through short essays on issues related to the tragedy, ethics, and recovery.
Subject(s)
Faculty , Homicide/ethics , Mass Casualty Incidents/ethics , Students/psychology , Suicide/ethics , Adult , Anecdotes as Topic , Female , Health Knowledge, Attitudes, Practice , Homicide/psychology , Humans , Male , Mass Casualty Incidents/psychology , Middle Aged , Morale , Student Health Services/methods , Suicide/psychology , Universities , VirginiaSubject(s)
Communicable Disease Control/organization & administration , Delivery of Health Care/ethics , Delivery of Health Care/standards , Disasters , Emergency Service, Hospital/ethics , Emergency Service, Hospital/organization & administration , Euthanasia, Active , Health Services Needs and Demand/ethics , Pandemics , Practice Patterns, Physicians'/ethics , Practice Patterns, Physicians'/organization & administration , Quarantine/organization & administration , Refusal to Treat , Terrorism , Triage , Communicable Disease Control/methods , Cyclonic Storms , Disaster Planning/methods , Earthquakes , Emergency Service, Hospital/standards , Euthanasia, Active/ethics , Health Workforce/ethics , Hospitals, District , Humans , Influenza, Human/epidemiology , Mass Casualty Incidents/ethics , Personnel Staffing and Scheduling/ethics , Practice Patterns, Physicians'/standards , Quarantine/methods , Refusal to Treat/ethics , Telecommunications/organization & administration , Triage/ethics , Triage/organization & administration , Triage/standards , United StatesABSTRACT
To assist community planners in allocating scarce resources in a mass casualty event, the Department of Health and Human Services' Agency for Healthcare Research and Quality (AHRQ) and the Office of the Assistant Secretary for Preparedness and Response collaborated with leading experts on a series of issue papers on preparedness and response. These papers were presented at an expert meeting in Washington, DC, in June 2006. The papers, revised based on meeting discussions, have been published by AHRQ as Mass Medical Care with Scarce Resources: A Community Planning Guide.