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Age discrimination, the right to life, and COVID‐19 vaccination in countries with limited resources

Peter Lloyd‐Sherlock, Aravinda Meera Guntupalli, Lucas Sempé

2022Journal of Social Issues17 citationsDOIOpen Access PDF

Abstract

This paper seeks to develop and apply a simple yardstick based on remaining life expectancy to assess whether specific health policies unfairly discriminate against people on the basis of their age. This reveals that the COVID-19 vaccine prioritization policies of several countries have discriminated against older people. Conversely, the exclusion of older people from COVID-19 vaccine testing is shown to be non-discriminatory, as is some degree of age prioritization for limited acute COVID-19 care. Age discrimination in vaccine prioritization is shown to be embedded in wider ageist attitudes in health policy, which give the lives of older people a lower social value than the lives of people at younger ages.

Topics & Concepts

YardstickPrioritizationLife expectancyCoronavirus disease 2019 (COVID-19)Social distanceOlder peoplePsychologyValue (mathematics)GerontologyHealth careMedicineEconomic growthEnvironmental healthBusinessEconomicsDiseaseComputer sciencePopulationProcess managementInfectious disease (medical specialty)Machine learningPathologyGeometryMathematicsEmployment and Welfare StudiesGlobal Health Care IssuesHealthcare Systems and Challenges
Age discrimination, the right to life, and COVID‐19 vaccination in countries with limited resources | Litcius