Prioritising access to pandemic influenza vaccine: a review of the ethics literature
- PMID: 32408869
- PMCID: PMC7224123
- DOI: 10.1186/s12910-020-00477-3
Prioritising access to pandemic influenza vaccine: a review of the ethics literature
Abstract
Background: The world is threatened by future pandemics. Vaccines can play a key role in preventing harm, but there will inevitably be shortages because there is no possibility of advance stockpiling. We therefore need some method of prioritising access.
Main text: This paper reports a critical interpretative review of the published literature that discusses ethical arguments used to justify how we could prioritise vaccine during an influenza pandemic. We found that the focus of the literature was often on proposing different groups as priorities (e.g. those with pre-existing health conditions, the young, the old, health care workers etc.). Different reasons were often suggested as a means of justifying such priority groupings (e.g. appeal to best overall outcomes, fairness, belonging to a vulnerable or 'at risk' group etc.). We suggest that much of the literature, wrongly, assumes that we are able to plan priority groups prior to the time of a particular pandemic and development of a particular vaccine. We also point out the surprising absence of various issues from the literature (e.g. how vaccines fit within overall pandemic planning, a lack of specificity about place, issues of global justice etc.).
Conclusions: The literature proposes a wide range of ways to prioritise vaccines, focusing on different groups and 'principles'. Any plan to use pandemic vaccine must provide justifications for its prioritisation. The focus of this review was influenza pandemic vaccines, but lessons can be learnt for future allocations of coronavirus vaccine, if one becomes available.
Keywords: Critical interpretative review; Ethics; Pandemic influenza; Prioritisation; Vaccine.
Conflict of interest statement
Neither author has any competing interests.
Comment in
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Who gets a COVID vaccine first? Access plans are taking shape.Nature. 2020 Sep;585(7826):492-493. doi: 10.1038/d41586-020-02684-9. Nature. 2020. PMID: 32948865 No abstract available.
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- World Health Organization. Pandemic influenza preparedness framework for the sharing of influenza viruses and access to vaccines and other benefits. Geneva: World Health Organization; 2011.
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- World Health Organization. A checklist for pandemic influenza risk and impact management: building capacity for pandemic response. Geneva: World Health Organization; 2018.
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- Baylis F, Kenny NP, Sherwin S. A relational account of public health Ethics. Public Health Ethics. 2008;1(3):196–209.
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- Jennings B, Arras JD. Ethical aspects of public health emergency preparedness and response. In: Jennings B, Arras J, Barrett DH, Ellis BA, editors. Emergency Ethics: public health preparedness and response. Oxford: Oxford University Press; 2016.
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