Ethical considerations for paediatrics during the COVID-19 pandemic: A discussion paper from the Australian Paediatric Clinical Ethics Collaboration
Author(s)
Jansen, Melanie
Irving, Helen
Gillam, Lynn
Sharwood, Erin
Preisz, Anne
Basu, Shreerupa
Delaney, Clare
McDougall, Rosalind
Johnston, Carolyn
Isaacs, David
Lister, Paula
Griffith University Author(s)
Year published
2020
Metadata
Show full item recordAbstract
Children have not been severely affected by SARS‐CoV‐2‐related illness but are vulnerable to the economic and social deprivation arising from the pandemic.1 This document describes unique risks and burdens for children and their care givers during the COVID‐19 pandemic.
The principles for the allocation of health‐care resources apply to the whole population; however, there are particular paediatric considerations. The experience internationally is that paediatric intensive care resources are being utilised to support adult services during the emergency. Ethical tensions also arise from decisions about usual service restriction ...
View more >Children have not been severely affected by SARS‐CoV‐2‐related illness but are vulnerable to the economic and social deprivation arising from the pandemic.1 This document describes unique risks and burdens for children and their care givers during the COVID‐19 pandemic. The principles for the allocation of health‐care resources apply to the whole population; however, there are particular paediatric considerations. The experience internationally is that paediatric intensive care resources are being utilised to support adult services during the emergency. Ethical tensions also arise from decisions about usual service restriction as a strategy for controlling the pandemic. This guidance provides a framework for health services and authorities to ensure paediatric concerns are considered during the development of COVID‐19 related guidelines and decision‐support tools, when resources may be constrained by the emergency response. It was developed by a working group of paediatric clinical ethicists, and intensive care and other specialty clinicians. This document is an extension to the other general documents available.2-4 It is intended to be read by clinicians and executive of paediatric and general hospitals, and by health‐related government departments.
View less >
View more >Children have not been severely affected by SARS‐CoV‐2‐related illness but are vulnerable to the economic and social deprivation arising from the pandemic.1 This document describes unique risks and burdens for children and their care givers during the COVID‐19 pandemic. The principles for the allocation of health‐care resources apply to the whole population; however, there are particular paediatric considerations. The experience internationally is that paediatric intensive care resources are being utilised to support adult services during the emergency. Ethical tensions also arise from decisions about usual service restriction as a strategy for controlling the pandemic. This guidance provides a framework for health services and authorities to ensure paediatric concerns are considered during the development of COVID‐19 related guidelines and decision‐support tools, when resources may be constrained by the emergency response. It was developed by a working group of paediatric clinical ethicists, and intensive care and other specialty clinicians. This document is an extension to the other general documents available.2-4 It is intended to be read by clinicians and executive of paediatric and general hospitals, and by health‐related government departments.
View less >
Journal Title
Journal of Paediatrics and Child Health
Subject
Paediatrics
Reproductive medicine
Clinical sciences
Health services and systems
Public health
Science & Technology
Life Sciences & Biomedicine
Pediatrics