Critical role of ethics in clinical management and public health response to the West Africa Ebola epidemic

Morenike O Folayan1,2 Bridget G Haire3 Brandon Brown4 1Institute of Public Health, 2Department of Child Dental Health, Obafemi Awolowo University, Ile-Ife, Nigeria; 3Kirby Institute for Infection and Immunity in Society, University of New South Wales, Sydney, NSW, Australia; 4Cente...

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Main Authors: Folayan MO, Haire BG, Brown B
Format: Article
Language:English
Published: Dove Medical Press 2016-05-01
Series:Risk Management and Healthcare Policy
Subjects:
Online Access:https://www.dovepress.com/critical-role-of-ethics-in-clinical-management-and-public-health-respo-peer-reviewed-article-RMHP
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spelling doaj-97fa3211f5e2473bbe819879956206972020-11-24T21:19:17ZengDove Medical PressRisk Management and Healthcare Policy1179-15942016-05-012016Issue 1556526906Critical role of ethics in clinical management and public health response to the West Africa Ebola epidemicFolayan MOHaire BGBrown BMorenike O Folayan1,2 Bridget G Haire3 Brandon Brown4 1Institute of Public Health, 2Department of Child Dental Health, Obafemi Awolowo University, Ile-Ife, Nigeria; 3Kirby Institute for Infection and Immunity in Society, University of New South Wales, Sydney, NSW, Australia; 4Center for Healthy Communities, Department of Social Medicine and Population Health, University of California Riverside School of Medicine, Riverside, CA, USA Abstract: The devastation caused by the Ebola virus disease (EVD) outbreak in West Africa has brought to the fore a number of important ethical debates about how best to respond to a health crisis. These debates include issues related to prevention and containment, management of the health care workforce, clinical care, and research design, all of which are situated within the overarching moral problem of severe transnational disadvantage, which has very real and specific impacts upon the ability of citizens of EVD-affected countries to respond to a disease outbreak. Ethical issues related to prevention and containment include the appropriateness and scope of quarantine and isolation within and outside affected countries. The possibility of infection in health care workers impelled consideration of whether there is an obligation to provide health services where personal protection equipment is inadequate, alongside the issue of whether the health care workforce should have special access to experimental treatment and care interventions under development. In clinical care, ethical issues include the standards of care owed to people who comply with quarantine and isolation restrictions. Ethical issues in research include appropriate study design related to experimental vaccines and treatment interventions, and the sharing of data and biospecimens between research groups. The compassionate use of experimental drugs intersects both with research ethics and clinical care. The role of developed countries also came under scrutiny, and we concluded that developed countries have an obligation to contribute to the containment of EVD infection by contributing to the strengthening of local health care systems and infrastructure in an effort to provide fair benefits to communities engaged in research, ensuring that affected countries have ready and affordable access to any therapeutic or preventative interventions developed, and supporting affected countries on their way to recovery from the impact of EVD on their social and economic lives. Keywords: Ebola, ethics, global comparisonhttps://www.dovepress.com/critical-role-of-ethics-in-clinical-management-and-public-health-respo-peer-reviewed-article-RMHPEbolaEthicsPublic Health Global comparison
collection DOAJ
language English
format Article
sources DOAJ
author Folayan MO
Haire BG
Brown B
spellingShingle Folayan MO
Haire BG
Brown B
Critical role of ethics in clinical management and public health response to the West Africa Ebola epidemic
Risk Management and Healthcare Policy
Ebola
Ethics
Public Health Global comparison
author_facet Folayan MO
Haire BG
Brown B
author_sort Folayan MO
title Critical role of ethics in clinical management and public health response to the West Africa Ebola epidemic
title_short Critical role of ethics in clinical management and public health response to the West Africa Ebola epidemic
title_full Critical role of ethics in clinical management and public health response to the West Africa Ebola epidemic
title_fullStr Critical role of ethics in clinical management and public health response to the West Africa Ebola epidemic
title_full_unstemmed Critical role of ethics in clinical management and public health response to the West Africa Ebola epidemic
title_sort critical role of ethics in clinical management and public health response to the west africa ebola epidemic
publisher Dove Medical Press
series Risk Management and Healthcare Policy
issn 1179-1594
publishDate 2016-05-01
description Morenike O Folayan1,2 Bridget G Haire3 Brandon Brown4 1Institute of Public Health, 2Department of Child Dental Health, Obafemi Awolowo University, Ile-Ife, Nigeria; 3Kirby Institute for Infection and Immunity in Society, University of New South Wales, Sydney, NSW, Australia; 4Center for Healthy Communities, Department of Social Medicine and Population Health, University of California Riverside School of Medicine, Riverside, CA, USA Abstract: The devastation caused by the Ebola virus disease (EVD) outbreak in West Africa has brought to the fore a number of important ethical debates about how best to respond to a health crisis. These debates include issues related to prevention and containment, management of the health care workforce, clinical care, and research design, all of which are situated within the overarching moral problem of severe transnational disadvantage, which has very real and specific impacts upon the ability of citizens of EVD-affected countries to respond to a disease outbreak. Ethical issues related to prevention and containment include the appropriateness and scope of quarantine and isolation within and outside affected countries. The possibility of infection in health care workers impelled consideration of whether there is an obligation to provide health services where personal protection equipment is inadequate, alongside the issue of whether the health care workforce should have special access to experimental treatment and care interventions under development. In clinical care, ethical issues include the standards of care owed to people who comply with quarantine and isolation restrictions. Ethical issues in research include appropriate study design related to experimental vaccines and treatment interventions, and the sharing of data and biospecimens between research groups. The compassionate use of experimental drugs intersects both with research ethics and clinical care. The role of developed countries also came under scrutiny, and we concluded that developed countries have an obligation to contribute to the containment of EVD infection by contributing to the strengthening of local health care systems and infrastructure in an effort to provide fair benefits to communities engaged in research, ensuring that affected countries have ready and affordable access to any therapeutic or preventative interventions developed, and supporting affected countries on their way to recovery from the impact of EVD on their social and economic lives. Keywords: Ebola, ethics, global comparison
topic Ebola
Ethics
Public Health Global comparison
url https://www.dovepress.com/critical-role-of-ethics-in-clinical-management-and-public-health-respo-peer-reviewed-article-RMHP
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