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2.
J Pediatr ; 251: 24-29, 2022 12.
Article in English | MEDLINE | ID: mdl-35948190

ABSTRACT

OBJECTIVE: To explore providers' perspectives about decisional authority, conflict resolution, and diverse family structures within the context of periviable delivery (eg, between 22 and 25 weeks of gestation), with the ultimate goal of helping practitioners support, engage, and navigate conflict with parents facing periviable delivery. STUDY DESIGN: Qualitative interviews with 30 neonatologists and obstetricians sought opinions about whether and how a pregnant person's partner should be involved in making periviable treatment decisions and how health care teams should proceed when parents do not agree on a treatment plan. Physicians were asked to consider whether their opinions changed under different scenarios involving marriage, biological relationship, adoption, and surrogacy. RESULTS: Interviews revealed 4 main themes corresponding to providers' perspectives regarding partner involvement and decisional authority: providers care; involvement matters; mom is the priority; and uncertainty and guidance needed. Unique themes arose when discussing diverse family structures. CONCLUSIONS: Shared decision making is optimal in the setting of periviable delivery, where decisions are both preference sensitive and value laden. Our interviews suggest that incorporating the dynamics and impact of partners' involvement in periviable resuscitation decision-making may facilitate more shared, equitable, and high-quality decision-making tailored to the needs of both pregnant people and their partners.


Subject(s)
Decision Making, Shared , Decision Making , Pregnancy , Female , Humans , Neonatologists , Parents , Morals
3.
J Bioeth Inq ; 19(2): 301-314, 2022 06.
Article in English | MEDLINE | ID: mdl-35522376

ABSTRACT

Meat is a multi-billion-dollar industry that relies on people performing risky physical work inside meat-processing facilities over long shifts in close proximity. These workers are socially disempowered, and many are members of groups beset by historic and ongoing structural discrimination. The combination of working conditions and worker characteristics facilitate the spread of SARS-CoV-2, the virus that causes COVID-19. Workers have been expected to put their health and lives at risk during the pandemic because of government and industry pressures to keep this "essential industry" producing. Numerous interventions can significantly reduce the risks to workers and their communities; however, the industry's implementation has been sporadic and inconsistent. With a focus on the U.S. context, this paper offers an ethical framework for infection prevention and control recommendations grounded in public health values of health and safety, interdependence and solidarity, and health equity and justice, with particular attention to considerations of reciprocity, equitable burden sharing, harm reduction, and health promotion. Meat-processing workers are owed an approach that protects their health relative to the risks of harms to them, their families, and their communities. Sacrifices from businesses benefitting financially from essential industry status are ethically warranted and should acknowledge the risks assumed by workers in the context of existing structural inequities.


Subject(s)
COVID-19 , COVID-19/epidemiology , COVID-19/prevention & control , Humans , Meat , Pandemics/prevention & control , Public Health , SARS-CoV-2 , United States/epidemiology
4.
J Law Med Ethics ; 50(1): 67-75, 2022.
Article in English | MEDLINE | ID: mdl-35243996

ABSTRACT

An inordinate number of low wage workers in essential industries are Black, Hispanic, or Latino, immigrants or refugees - groups beset by centuries of discrimination and burdened with disproportionate but preventable harms during the COVID-19 pandemic.


Subject(s)
COVID-19 , Pandemics , COVID-19/epidemiology , Hispanic or Latino , Humans , Policy , SARS-CoV-2
5.
J Law Med Ethics ; 50(4): 636-640, 2022.
Article in English | MEDLINE | ID: mdl-36883386

ABSTRACT

Health justice is both a community-led movement for power building and transformational change and a community-oriented framework for health law scholarship. Health justice is distinguished by a distinctively social ethic of care that reframes the relationship between health care, public health, and the social determinants of health, and names subordination as the root cause of health inequities.


Subject(s)
Health Facilities , Public Health , Humans
6.
Hastings Cent Rep ; 52(1): 51-58, 2022 01.
Article in English | MEDLINE | ID: mdl-34908169

ABSTRACT

Covid-19 raised many novel ethical issues including regarding the allocation of opportunities to participate in clinical trials during a public health emergency. In this article, we explore how hospitals that have a scarcity of trial opportunities, either overall or in a specific trial, can equitably allocate those opportunities in the context of an urgent medical need with limited therapeutic interventions. We assess the three main approaches to allocating trial opportunities discussed in the literature: patient choice, physician referral, and randomization/lottery. As, we argue, none of the three typical approaches are ethically ideal for allocating trial opportunities in the pandemic context, many hospitals have instead implemented hybrid solutions. We offer practical guidance to support those continuing to face these challenges, and we analyze options for the future.


Subject(s)
COVID-19 , Clinical Trials as Topic , Pandemics , Patient Selection , Emergencies , Humans , Pandemics/prevention & control , Public Health
7.
Lancet Reg Health Am ; 16: 100374, 2022 Dec.
Article in English | MEDLINE | ID: mdl-36777151

ABSTRACT

Communicating public health guidance is key to mitigating risk during disasters and outbreaks, and ethical guidance on communication emphasizes being fully transparent. Yet, communication during the pandemic has sometimes been fraught, due in part to practical and conceptual challenges around being transparent. A particular challenge has arisen when there was both evolving scientific knowledge on COVID-19 and reticence to acknowledge that resource scarcity concerns were influencing public health recommendations. This essay uses the example of communicating public health guidance on masking in the United States to illustrate ethical challenges of developing and conveying public health guidance under twin conditions of uncertainty and resource scarcity. Such situations require balancing two key principles in public health ethics: the precautionary principle and harm reduction. Transparency remains a bedrock value to guide risk communication, but optimizing transparency requires consideration of additional ethical values in developing and implementing risk communication strategies.

9.
Clin Trials ; 18(2): 226-233, 2021 04.
Article in English | MEDLINE | ID: mdl-33530721

ABSTRACT

Given the dearth of established safe and effective interventions to respond to COVID-19, there is an urgent ethical imperative to conduct meaningful clinical research. The good news is that interventions to be tested are not in short supply. Unfortunately, the human and material resources needed to conduct these trials are finite. It is essential that trials be robust and meet enrollment targets and that lower-quality studies not be permitted to displace higher-quality studies, delaying answers to critical questions. Yet, with few exceptions, existing research review bodies and processes are not designed to ensure these conditions are satisfied. To meet this challenge, we offer guidance for research institutions about how to ethically consolidate and prioritize COVID-19 clinical trials, while recognizing that consolidation and prioritization should also take place upstream (among manufacturers and funders) and at a higher level (e.g. nationally). In our proposed three-stage process, trials must first meet threshold criteria. Those that do are evaluated in a second stage to determine whether the institution has sufficient capacity to support all proposed trials. If it does not, the third stage entails evaluating studies against two additional sets of comparative prioritization criteria: those specific to the study and those that aim to advance diversification of an institution's research portfolio. To implement these criteria fairly, we propose that research institutions form COVID-19 research prioritization committees. We briefly discuss some important attributes of these committees, drawing on the authors' experiences at our respective institutions. Although we focus on clinical trials of COVID-19 therapeutics, our guidance should prove useful for other kinds of COVID-19 research, as well as non-pandemic research, which can raise similar challenges due to the scarcity of research resources.


Subject(s)
COVID-19/therapy , Clinical Trials as Topic/ethics , Clinical Trials as Topic/organization & administration , Biomedical Research/ethics , Biomedical Research/organization & administration , Ethics Committees, Research , Ethics, Research , Health Priorities , Health Resources , Humans , Research Design , SARS-CoV-2
10.
J Law Biosci ; 7(1): lsaa036, 2020.
Article in English | MEDLINE | ID: mdl-32879732
11.
J Law Med Ethics ; 48(4): 765-767, 2020 12.
Article in English | MEDLINE | ID: mdl-33404330

Subject(s)
Hope , Morals , Fertility , Humans
12.
J Law Med Ethics ; 47(4_suppl): 103-115, 2019 12.
Article in English | MEDLINE | ID: mdl-31955688

ABSTRACT

This essay argues that feminist legal theory offers an important, and underutilized, perspective to examine health law and policy. We use several theoretical frameworks developed by feminist legal theorists including relational autonomy, intersectionality, vulnerability theory, and the feminist critique of the public-private divide to demonstrate the utility of these theories to health law analysis. These frameworks provide insights relevant not only to issues that obviously relate to gender, but also to matters of choice, quality, and access that are less obviously gender-related. We map three key areas of existing scholarship and future inquiry at the intersection of health law and feminist legal theory: (I) patient choice and relational autonomy, (II) patriarchy, power and patient safety, and (III) access to health care and healthy living conditions at the public-private divide. Uniting these areas of inquiry is a nagging question central to the relationship between critical legal scholarship (including feminist scholarship) and pragmatic action to combat injustice: Can we use legal rights to achieve our aims even as we recognize them as tainted tools that have propped up oppressive social structures? A feminist agenda for health law and policy must grapple with this dilemma.


Subject(s)
Delivery of Health Care/legislation & jurisprudence , Health Policy/legislation & jurisprudence , Decision Making , Female , Feminism , Health Services Accessibility , Humans , Patient Preference , Patient Safety , Personal Autonomy , Physician-Patient Relations , Quality of Health Care , Reproductive Health , Reproductive Rights , Sex Factors , United States
13.
J Law Med Ethics ; 43(2): 270-4, 2015.
Article in English | MEDLINE | ID: mdl-26242948

ABSTRACT

Jesudason and Weitz's article examines two public policy debates in California, where both sides of the debate used similar language that had the potential to be detrimental to women. Specifically, they show how anti-abortion crusaders in California used similar language to describe why women's rights should be curtailed as pro-choice advocates use when fighting for more choice and privacy for women's reproductive decisions. This commentary builds upon their article by demonstrating the harm that such co-opting causes to women's rights using the example of sex selective abortion. By examining the legislative history of state and national bills to ban sex-selective abortion, this commentary demonstrates how the anti-abortion lobby has adopted the language of pro-choice advocates quite effectively. Although the framing of this issue as being "woman-protective" is strategic and insincere, such political framing is powerful, as Jesudason and Weitz have noted. Anti-abortion activists have convinced lawmakers in many states that sex-selective abortion is a dire issue in their state and that they must restrict it in order to protect women. In fact, there is no evidence that sex selective abortion is a problem in the United States, yet these frames have been very effective in weakening women's privacy rights. Whenever woman-protective framings are invoked for self-serving purposes, women's rights advocates must work hard to uncover the truth behind these discourses to prevent successful legislative efforts that curtail women's reproductive freedom.


Subject(s)
Abortion, Induced/legislation & jurisprudence , Women's Rights/legislation & jurisprudence , Female , Humans , Pregnancy , Public Policy , United States
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