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Ethical Rationing of Personal Protective Equipment to Minimize Moral Residue During the COVID-19 Pandemic

Charles E. Binkley, David S. Kemp

2020Journal of the American College of Surgeons51 citationsDOIOpen Access PDF

Abstract

This article proposes systems for the fair distribution of scarce resources to healthcare providers. It builds on classic ethical structures and adapts them to the equitable distribution of personal protective equipment (PPE) to clinicians at risk of contracting novel corona virus-19 (COVID-19). The article also defines systems of allocation that are generally considered unethical and are to be avoided. We emphasize that policies must be transparent, collaborative, applied equally, and have a system of accountability. It is recognized that unless the supply of PPE is quickly replenished, or viable alternatives to traditional equipment are devised in the coming days to weeks, hospitals and healthcare systems will face the difficult task of rationing PPE to at-risk clinicians. This paper suggests an ethical framework for that process.

Topics & Concepts

RationingPersonal protective equipmentHealth care rationingMedicinePandemicAccountabilityHealth careCoronavirus disease 2019 (COVID-19)Risk analysis (engineering)Process (computing)Internet privacyInfectious disease (medical specialty)LawComputer scienceDiseaseOperating systemPolitical sciencePathologyDisaster Response and ManagementEthics in medical practiceTorture, Ethics, and Law
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