Do we need an ethical framework for hospital infection control?
- PMID: 19783071
- PMCID: PMC7132537
- DOI: 10.1016/j.jhin.2009.07.024
Do we need an ethical framework for hospital infection control?
Abstract
Strategies for the control of the spread of infection in hospitals may lead to constraints on individual autonomy, freedom of movement, or contact with others. Codes of (ethical) practice for healthcare professionals tend to emphasise responsibilities to individual patients. Ethical frameworks for public health focus on groups of individuals (populations), the majority of whom are relatively healthy and empowered. Hospital infection control professionals must take account of both of these perspectives, sensitive to the care of infected and potentially infectious individuals, while protecting the vulnerable and relatively dependent population of hospital patients from further compromise to their health. A number of frameworks for an ethics of public health have been proposed over the last few years but there are sufficient differences in ethical considerations between collective interventions that aim to protect and promote the health of the public and interventions taken in the context of hospital infection control to justify a distinctive ethics of hospital infection control. Professional bodies may be best placed to lead the development of such a framework.
References
-
- Francis L.P., Battin M.P., Jacobson J.A., Smith C.B., Botkin J. How infectious diseases got left out – and what this omission might have meant for bioethics. Bioethics. 2005;19:307–324. - PubMed
-
- Selgelid M.J. Ethics, tuberculosis and globalization. Public Health Ethics. 2008;1:10–20.
-
- Stelfox H.T., Bates D.W., Redelmeier D.A. Safety of patients isolated for infection control. J Am Med Assoc. 2003;290:1899–1905. - PubMed
-
- Public Health (Scotland Act). Part 4 — Public health functions of health boards, sections 38–51. The Stationary Office 2008.
-
- Edmond M., Lyckholm L., Diekema D. Ethical implications of active surveillance cultures and contact precautions for controlling multidrug resistant organisms in the hospital setting. Public Health Ethics. 2008;1:235–245.
MeSH terms
LinkOut - more resources
Full Text Sources
Medical