Title of article :
ethical considerations for clinicians faced with patients lacking the capacity to form reasoned judgments regarding covid-19 tests and isolation
Author/Authors :
yuk-chiu yip, jeffrey caritas institute of higher education - school of health sciences, hong kong, china
Abstract :
Introduction
Dealing with patients suffering severe mental health
problems during the Coronavirus disease 2019 (COVID-19)
pandemic have raised several, complex, clinical and ethical
questions (1). Such patients may need to be treated within
secure facilities where many patients and staff live in close
proximity, increasing the risk of disease transmission. In
February 2020, in the Daenam hospital in South Korea, an
infection cluster was found in the psychiatric ward, with
101/103 patients testing positive (2). In this pandemic’s
unprecedented circumstances, psychological pressure on
medical staff has been severe (3). Clinical staff have been
significantly at risk when dealing with psychiatric inpatients,
especially in areas where high infection levels have led to
shortfalls in personal protective equipment supply. Several
strategies are required to reduce infection risks for psychiatric
inpatients and their caregivers. Such strategies may include a
comprehensive test program, mask-wearing, and social
distancing. However, psychiatric patients would frequently not possess the capacity to make reasoned
judgments regarding the refusal of testing or noncompliance with anti-infection protocols. Because of
psychiatric illness, such patients may refrain from being tested or following protocols such as maskwearing or isolation. Thus, clinicians have faced with serious ethical problems when dealing with
psychiatric inpatients during this pandemic, in that they must balance the requirements of respecting
patient autonomy and allowing them as much freedom of self-determination as is appropriate, against
the need to protect the patient from infection and prevent them from infecting others. This commentary
aimed at assisting clinicians facing with such ethical dilemmas.
Keywords :
ethical considerations , patients lacking the capacity , clinicians , covid-19 tests , isolation
Journal title :
Journal of Medical Ethics and History of Medicine
Journal title :
Journal of Medical Ethics and History of Medicine