WHO and state reports on ethics and pandemic flu planning
The folks at CIDRAP News report in this story that the WHO plans to issue a report in January on ethical issues associated with pandemic flu planning. Among the topics to be explored: access, the ethics of quarantine and related actions, health-care worker responsibilities, and international collaboration. All are important topics will ethical aspects that merit attention alongside the relevant science and public health considerations.
Speaking of WHO, yesterday's New York Times included an editorial, "Preparations for a Flu Pandemic," that questions the current pace of pandemic planning, particularly vaccine development and supply issues that are certain to complicate mass vaccination efforts.
Thinking about limited vaccine supply and the ethics of allocating those doses, a number of scholars and organizations have offered ethical perspectives on how best to do so. (The most notable: the Emanuel/Wertheimer essay in Science back in May, which we wrote about here.) This week, the Minnesota Center for Health Care Ethics released a very interesting report titled "Allocating Pandemic Influenza Vaccines in Minnesota." Growing out of a multi-disciplinary working group of state-wide stakeholders, the report offers a different model for prioritizing specifics groups than the current HHS plan. While the report is written for Minnesotans in particular, the discussion of ethical concerns and priorities is relevant everywhere. The report is well worth reading for anyone interested in the ethical priorities that will influence these difficult decisions.
The Minneapolis Star-Tribune wrote a story ("A Tough Call Awaits if a Killer Flu Breaks Out," October 23) on the report that includes a few quotes from us, among others.
Speaking of WHO, yesterday's New York Times included an editorial, "Preparations for a Flu Pandemic," that questions the current pace of pandemic planning, particularly vaccine development and supply issues that are certain to complicate mass vaccination efforts.
Thinking about limited vaccine supply and the ethics of allocating those doses, a number of scholars and organizations have offered ethical perspectives on how best to do so. (The most notable: the Emanuel/Wertheimer essay in Science back in May, which we wrote about here.) This week, the Minnesota Center for Health Care Ethics released a very interesting report titled "Allocating Pandemic Influenza Vaccines in Minnesota." Growing out of a multi-disciplinary working group of state-wide stakeholders, the report offers a different model for prioritizing specifics groups than the current HHS plan. While the report is written for Minnesotans in particular, the discussion of ethical concerns and priorities is relevant everywhere. The report is well worth reading for anyone interested in the ethical priorities that will influence these difficult decisions.
The Minneapolis Star-Tribune wrote a story ("A Tough Call Awaits if a Killer Flu Breaks Out," October 23) on the report that includes a few quotes from us, among others.
Labels: Allocation, Pandemic flu, Planning, WHO








