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Tytuł pozycji:

Intensive and pharmacological care in times of COVID-19: A 'special ethics' for emergency?

Tytuł:
Intensive and pharmacological care in times of COVID-19: A 'special ethics' for emergency?
Autorzy:
Enrico Marinelli
Francesco Paolo Busardò
Simona Zaami
Temat:
COVID-19
Emergency
Ethics
Medical philosophy. Medical ethics
R723-726
Źródło:
BMC Medical Ethics, Vol 21, Iss 1, Pp 1-5 (2020)
Wydawca:
BMC, 2020.
Rok publikacji:
2020
Kolekcja:
LCC:Medical philosophy. Medical ethics
Typ dokumentu:
article
Opis pliku:
electronic resource
Język:
English
ISSN:
1472-6939
Relacje:
http://link.springer.com/article/10.1186/s12910-020-00562-7; https://doaj.org/toc/1472-6939
DOI:
10.1186/s12910-020-00562-7
Dostęp URL:
https://doaj.org/article/ad2bef7e9e4f45739719c28d12f03841  Link otwiera się w nowym oknie
Numer akcesji:
edsdoj.2bef7e9e4f45739719c28d12f03841
Czasopismo naukowe
Abstract Background The Authors have laid out an analysis of Italian COVID-19 confirmed data and fatality rates, pointing out how a dearth of health care resources in northern regions has resulted in hard, ethically challenging decisions in terms of granting patient access to intensive care units (ICU). Main text Having to make such decisions certainly entails substantial difficulties, and that has led many health care professional to seek ethical guidance. The Italian Society of Anesthesia, Analgesia, Resuscitation and Intensive Care (SIAARTI) has attempted to meet that growing need by a set of recommendations, applying “clinical soundness” as a beacon standard; that approach tends to prioritize patients with higher life expectancy, which could be characterized as a “moderately utilitarian” approach. Yet, such a selection has engendered daunting ethical quandaries. The authors believe it can only be warranted and acceptable if rooted in a transparent decision-making process and verifiable, reviewed criteria. Moreover, the authors have stressed how clinical experimentation in a pandemic setting is a subtext of great interest from an ethical perspective. In Italy, no drug therapy and trials were undertaken for COVID-19 patients for a rather long period of time. When the epidemic was already circulating, an intervention proved necessary on the system of administrative procedures, aimed at expediting the authorization and validation of protocols, then bogged down by bureaucracy. A new system has since been instituted by a government decree that was signed about one month after the first Covid-19 case was officially recorded in the country. Such a swift implementation, which took just a few weeks, is noteworthy and proves that clinical trials can be initiated in a timely fashion, even with a pandemic unfolding. The concerted, action of supportive care and RCTs is the only way to attain effective forms of treatments for COVID-19 and any other future outbreak. Conclusions The authors have arrived at the conclusion that the most effective and ethically sound response on the part of any national health care system would be to adequately reconfigure its organizational mechanisms, by making clinical trials and all related administrative procedures consistent with the current state of emergency.

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