Skip Navigation
 
CHS blue logo square
 
 
Home > Our Work > All Publications > 2010

Publications

Our publications keep professionals working across the public, private, and academic sectors informed on the most important developments and issues in health security and biosecurity.

Find an article or report by keywords:

 
 
Find an article or report or see all by area, author, or year:

Title:

Public Health Emergencies and Legal Standards of Care—Reply

Authors:
James G. Hodge, Jr., Brooke Courtney
Date posted:
May 12, 2010
Publication type:
Letter
Publication:

JAMA 2010;303(18):1811-1812

Publisher:
American Medical Association
Availability:
Subscription required
Introduction:

Mr Bhattacharya raises ethical and liability concerns with our Commentary on the legal standard of care during crisis situations. We agree with the quintessential value of ethics in developing and implementing a crisis standard of care. Our concept of a legal standard of care in emergencies builds on the comprehensive work of the Institute of Medicine (IOM) committee,1 which explicitly noted the role of ethics in crisis care planning and response efforts.

In developing its strategy for allocating ventilators in emergencies, the New York State Task Force on Life and the Law acknowledged "ethics cannot be set aside during a public health disaster."2 Bhattacharya takes specific aim at the task force's conclusion that ventilators may ethically be withdrawn or withheld from patients with little chance to survive in emergencies to benefit those with a higher likelihood of survival.2 He proposes that other criteria may be reasonable, including allocations...

 

 

Our Mission

To protect people’s health from epidemics and disasters and ensure that communities are resilient to major challenges.