Searched for: person:caplaa01
Stigma, vaccination, and moral accountability [Letter]
Caplan, Arthur L
PMCID:8830899
PMID: 35151392
ISSN: 1474-547x
CID: 5167292
Correction to: The changing world of IVF: the pros and cons of new business models offering assisted reproductive technologies
Patrizio, Pasquale; Albertini, David F; Gleicher, Norbert; Caplan, Arthur
PMID: 35088294
ISSN: 1573-7330
CID: 5154802
The changing world of IVF: the pros and cons of new business models offering assisted reproductive technologies
Patrizio, Pasquale; Albertini, David F; Gleicher, Norbert; Caplan, Arthur
This analysis contrasts traditional not-for-profit academic with new corporate practices of reproductive medicine and offers an assessment of risks to quality of patient care with investors entering the for-profit reproductive medicine market. Large corporate enterprises may have a global impact on access to care while at the same time is putting at risk the training of the next generation of reproductive medicine specialists.
PMCID:8769942
PMID: 35048274
ISSN: 1573-7330
CID: 5131652
COVID-19, children, clinical trials and compassion: The ethical case for using innovative or compassionate treatments
Larcher, Vic; Caplan, Art; Brierley, Joe
AIM/OBJECTIVE:Safe, effective SARS-CoV-2 treatment has not yet been determined, though some drugs have favourable mortality and morbidity benefits in specific situations. No treatments have been explicitly tested in children, who are, therefore, once again therapeutic orphans. METHOD/METHODS:We echo calls to enrol patients, including children, into trials but those children recruited to date have largely been additions to adult studies. Few were recruited during the initial pandemic despite the emergence of PIMS-TS/MIS-C, which surely demands paediatric-specific research. RESULT/RESULTS:Must children be proscribed treatments effective in adults until child-specific data emerges, even in a pandemic? Will appropriately powered dedicated trials ever determine specific child-COVID-19 treatment pathways? Is the protracted time frame to assemble such data acceptable to children with severe COVID-19 today? Such factors are relevant in considering whether children should have access to compassionate, innovative, pandemic-disease treatment. CONCLUSION/CONCLUSIONS:We argue that children should be permitted, indeed have a right, to access innovative treatments early in any future pandemic, following an individual best interests consideration. This will remain the case until formal studies powered to determine children's optimal treatment commence, when the moral duty switches to ensuring children are enrolled, with any preceding innovative-use data made available to researchers.
PMID: 34626491
ISSN: 1651-2227
CID: 5067882
Promoting COVID-19 vaccine acceptance: recommendations from the Lancet Commission on Vaccine Refusal, Acceptance, and Demand in the USA
Omer, Saad B; Benjamin, Regina M; Brewer, Noel T; Buttenheim, Alison M; Callaghan, Timothy; Caplan, Arthur; Carpiano, Richard M; Clinton, Chelsea; DiResta, Renee; Elharake, Jad A; Flowers, Lisa C; Galvani, Alison P; Lakshmanan, Rekha; Maldonado, Yvonne A; McFadden, SarahAnn M; Mello, Michelle M; Opel, Douglas J; Reiss, Dorit R; Salmon, Daniel A; Schwartz, Jason L; Sharfstein, Joshua M; Hotez, Peter J
Since the first case of COVID-19 was identified in the USA in January, 2020, over 46 million people in the country have tested positive for SARS-CoV-2 infection. Several COVID-19 vaccines have received emergency use authorisations from the US Food and Drug Administration, with the Pfizer-BioNTech vaccine receiving full approval on Aug 23, 2021. When paired with masking, physical distancing, and ventilation, COVID-19 vaccines are the best intervention to sustainably control the pandemic. However, surveys have consistently found that a sizeable minority of US residents do not plan to get a COVID-19 vaccine. The most severe consequence of an inadequate uptake of COVID-19 vaccines has been sustained community transmission (including of the delta [B.1.617.2] variant, a surge of which began in July, 2021). Exacerbating the direct impact of the virus, a low uptake of COVID-19 vaccines will prolong the social and economic repercussions of the pandemic on families and communities, especially low-income and minority ethnic groups, into 2022, or even longer. The scale and challenges of the COVID-19 vaccination campaign are unprecedented. Therefore, through a series of recommendations, we present a coordinated, evidence-based education, communication, and behavioural intervention strategy that is likely to improve the success of COVID-19 vaccine programmes across the USA.
PMCID:8592561
PMID: 34793741
ISSN: 1474-547x
CID: 5049462
Knowledge and Attitudes Toward Covid-19 and Vaccines Among a New York Haredi-Orthodox Jewish Community
Carmody, Ellie R; Zander, Devon; Klein, Elizabeth J; Mulligan, Mark J; Caplan, Arthur L
The Covid-19 pandemic has exposed the difficulty of the US public health system to respond effectively to vulnerable subpopulations, causing disproportionate rates of morbidity and mortality. New York Haredi-Orthodox Jewish communities represent a group that have been heavily impacted by Covid-19. Little research has examined their experience or perceptions toward Covid-19 and vaccines. We conducted a cross-sectional, observational study to explore the experience of Covid-19 among Haredim. Paper surveys were self-administered between December 2020 and January 2021 in Haredi neighborhood pediatricians' offices in Brooklyn, New York. Of 102 respondents, 43% reported either a positive SARS-CoV-2 viral or antibody test. Participants trusted their physicians, Orthodox medical organizations, and rabbinic leaders for medical information. Knowledge of Covid-19 transmission and risk was good (69% answered ≥ 4/6 questions correctly). Only 12% of respondents would accept a Covid-19 vaccine, 41% were undecided and 47% were strongly hesitant. Independent predictors of strong vaccine hesitancy included believing natural infection to be better than vaccination for developing immunity (adjusted odds ratio [aOR] 4.28; 95% confidence interval [CI] 1.23-14.86), agreement that prior infection provides a path toward resuming communal life (aOR 4.10; 95% CI 1.22-13.77), and pandemic-related loss of trust in physicians (aOR 5.01; 95% CI 1.05-23.96). The primary disseminators of health information for self-protective religious communities should be stakeholders who understand these groups' unique health needs. In communities with significant Covid-19 experience, vaccination messaging may need to be tailored toward protecting infection-naïve individuals and boosting natural immunity against emerging variants.
PMCID:8127857
PMID: 33999317
ISSN: 1573-3610
CID: 4876672
Current COVID-19 vaccine trials in high-income countries: are placebo-controlled trials ethical?
Dal-Ré, Rafael; Caplan, Arthur L
PMCID:8349440
PMID: 34375757
ISSN: 1469-0691
CID: 5006152
Phantom premise and a shape-shifting ism: reply to Hassoun
Ferguson, Kyle; Caplan, Arthur
PMID: 33963070
ISSN: 1473-4257
CID: 4868172
Parental consent for vaccination of minors against COVID-19
Shevzov-Zebrun, Nina; Caplan, Arthur
PMCID:8463387
PMID: 34598821
ISSN: 1873-2518
CID: 5039742
Helpful Lessons and Cautionary Tales: How Should COVID-19 Drug Development and Access Inform Approaches to Non-Pandemic Diseases?
Lynch, Holly Fernandez; Caplan, Arthur; Furlong, Patricia; Bateman-House, Alison
After witnessing extraordinary scientific and regulatory efforts to speed development of and access to new COVID-19 interventions, patients facing other serious diseases have begun to ask "where's our Operation Warp Speed?" and "why isn't Emergency Use Authorization an option for our health crises?" Although this pandemic bears a number of unique features, the response to COVID-19 offers translatable lessons, in both its successes and failures, for non-pandemic diseases. These include the importance of collaborating across sectors, supporting the highest-priority research efforts, adopting rigorous and innovative trial designs, and sharing reliable information quickly. In addition, the regulatory response to the pandemic demonstrates that lowering standards for marketing authorization can result in increased safety concerns, missed opportunities for research and treatment, and delays in determining what works. Accordingly, policymakers and patient advocates seeking to build on the COVID-19 experience for non-pandemic diseases with unmet treatment needs should focus their efforts on promoting robust and efficient research designs, improving access to clinical trials, and facilitating use of the Food and Drug Administration's existing Expanded Access pathway.
PMID: 34665689
ISSN: 1536-0075
CID: 5043252