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Human rights and COVID-19 triage: a comment on the Bath protocol

Vivek Bhatt, Sabine Michalowski, Aaron Wyllie, Margot Kuylen, Wayne Martin

2021Journal of Medical Ethics26 citationsDOIOpen Access PDF

Abstract

present a draft protocol for navigating circumstances in which emergency services are overwhelmed. Their paper suggests that COVID-related triage decisions should be based on clinical assessment, patient and family consultation, and a range of ethical considerations. In this response, we note that the protocol exhibits an ambiguity that is likely to result in irresolvable dilemmas when put into practice. This ambiguity is exemplified in the paper's prime ethical imperative (to 'save more lives and more years of life'), which takes the form of an undefined conjunction whose practical implications are left unspecified. We see this ambiguity in the prime imperative as one manifestation of a broader set of tensions in the protocol. We show that the discipline of human rights provides an essential supplement to the ethical framework on which Cook and colleagues rely, providing a framework for understanding and working through triage dilemmas involving age, discrimination and equality.

Topics & Concepts

AmbiguityTriageProtocol (science)Set (abstract data type)Coronavirus disease 2019 (COVID-19)Human rightsPrime (order theory)Engineering ethicsComputer securityPsychologyComputer scienceMedicineInternet privacySociologyPublic relationsMedical emergencyPolitical scienceLawEngineeringAlternative medicinePathologyDiseaseProgramming languageMathematicsCombinatoricsInfectious disease (medical specialty)Disaster Response and ManagementMigration, Health and TraumaPalliative Care and End-of-Life Issues
Human rights and COVID-19 triage: a comment on the Bath protocol | Litcius