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Considerations in mandating a new Covid-19 vaccine in the USA for children and adults

Reiss, Dorit R; Caplan, Arthur L
PMCID:7239112
PMID: 32728468
ISSN: 2053-9711
CID: 4735062

Rationing health and social goods during pandemics: Guidance for Ghanaian decision makers

Laar, Amos; DeBruin, Debra; Ofori-Asenso, Richard; Laar, Matilda Essandoh; Redman, Barbara; Caplan, Arthur
Healthcare rationing during pandemics has been widely discussed in global bioethics literature. However, existing scenarios and analyses have focused on high income countries, except for very few disease areas such as HIV treatment where some analyses related to African countries exist. We argue that the lack of scholastic discourse, and by extension, professional and democratic engagement on the subject constitute an unacceptable ethical omission. Not only have African governments failed to develop robust ethical plans for pandemics, ethicists in this region have been unable to ignite public discourse on rationing. Therefore, we aim to initiate a debate on how rationing health and social goods could be done ethically in Ghana during the current and future pandemics. The paper discusses and critiques some moral considerations (utilitarian, equity, equal worth, urgent need, and the prioritarian principles) for rationing and their relevance in the Ghanaian context. This contribution may facilitate ethical decision-making during the current (COVID-19) pandemic - in Ghana and other African settings where hardly any rationing guidelines exist.
SCOPUS:85097075541
ISSN: 1477-7509
CID: 4732862

Love thy neighbour? Allocating vaccines in a world of competing obligations

Ferguson, Kyle; Caplan, Arthur
Although a safe, effective, and licensed coronavirus vaccine does not yet exist, there is already controversy over how it ought to be allocated. Justice is clearly at stake, but it is unclear what justice requires in the international distribution of a scarce vaccine during a pandemic. Many are condemning 'vaccine nationalism' as an obstacle to equitable global distribution. We argue that limited national partiality in allocating vaccines will be a component of justice rather than an obstacle to it. For there are role-based and community-embedded responsibilities to take care of one's own, which constitute legitimate moral reasons for some identity-related prioritisation. Furthermore, a good form of vaccine nationalism prioritises one's own without denying or ignoring duties derived from a principle of equal worth, according to which all persons, regardless of citizenship or identity, equally deserve vaccine-induced protection from COVID-19. Rather than dismissing nationalism as a tragic obstacle, it is necessary to acknowledge that a limited form of it is valuable and expresses moral commitments. Only then can one understand our world of competing obligations, a world where cosmopolitan duties of benevolence sometimes conflict with special obligations of community membership. Once these competing obligations are recognised as such, we can begin the work of designing sound ethical frameworks for achieving justice in the global distribution of a coronavirus vaccine and developing practical strategies for avoiding, mitigating or resolving conflicts of duty.
PMCID:7735068
PMID: 33310742
ISSN: 1473-4257
CID: 4722462

Introduction

Chapter by: Caplan, Arthur; Parent, Brendan
in: The Ethical Challenges of Emerging Medical Technologies by
[S.l.] : Taylor and Francis, 2020
pp. 1-16
ISBN: 9781472429155
CID: 4683342

The ethical challenges of emerging medical technologies

Chapter by: Caplan, Arthur; Parent, Brendan
in: The Ethical Challenges of Emerging Medical Technologies by
[S.l.] : Taylor and Francis, 2020
pp. 1-489
ISBN: 9781472429155
CID: 4683362

Drugs of unproven benefit for COVID-19: a pharma perspective on ethical allocation of available therapies

Caplan, Arthur L; Waldstreicher, Joanne; Childers, Karla; Maree, Aran
PMCID:7598031
PMID: 32931482
ISSN: 1558-8238
CID: 4679152

Reactions to the National Academies/Royal Society Report on Heritable Human Genome Editing

Angrist, Misha; Barrangou, Rodolphe; Baylis, Françoise; Brokowski, Carolyn; Burgio, Gaetan; Caplan, Arthur; Chapman, Carolyn Riley; Church, George M; Cook-Deegan, Robert; Cwik, Bryan; Doudna, Jennifer A; Evans, John H; Greely, Henry T; Hercher, Laura; Hurlbut, J Benjamin; Hynes, Richard O; Ishii, Tetsuya; Kiani, Samira; Lee, LaTasha Hoskins; Levrier, Guillaume; Liu, David R; Lunshof, Jeantine E; Macintosh, Kerry Lynn; Mathews, Debra J H; Meslin, Eric M; Mills, Peter H R; Montoliu, Lluis; Musunuru, Kiran; Nicol, Dianne; O'Neill, Helen; Qiu, Renzong; Ranisch, Robert; Sherkow, Jacob S; Soni, Sheetal; Terry, Sharon; Topol, Eric; Williamson, Robert; Zhang, Feng; Davies, Kevin
In September 2020, a detailed report on Heritable Human Genome Editing was published. The report offers a translational pathway for the limited approval of germline editing under limited circumstances and assuming various criteria have been met. In this perspective, some three dozen experts from the fields of genome editing, medicine, bioethics, law, and related fields offer their candid reactions to the National Academies/Royal Society report, highlighting areas of support, omissions, disagreements, and priorities moving forward.
PMID: 33095048
ISSN: 2573-1602
CID: 4679172

Ethical considerations for protecting the options of subjects in primary epidemic vaccine trials

Caplan, Arthur L; Abraham, Jerrold L
PMID: 32943477
ISSN: 1473-4257
CID: 4651602

The danger of DIY vaccines [Editorial]

Caplan, Arthur L; Bateman-House, Alison
PMID: 32855312
ISSN: 1095-9203
CID: 4614502

The ethics of the unmentionable

Caplan, Arthur L
PMID: 32895297
ISSN: 1473-4257
CID: 4590182