What Matters? Palliative Care, Ethics, and the COVID-19 Pandemic.
Linda SheahanFrank BrennanPublished in: Journal of bioethical inquiry (2020)
As is often the case in clinical ethics, the discourse in COVID-19 has focused primarily on difficult and controversial decision-making junctures such as how to decide who gets access to intensive care resources if demand outstrips supply. However, the lived experience of COVID-19 raises less controversial but arguably more profound moral questions around what it means to look after each other through the course of the pandemic and how this translates in care for the dying. This piece explores the interface between the pandemic, ethics, and the role of palliative care. We argue that the ethical discourse should be broader, and that the principles that underly the discipline of palliative care provide a solid ethical foundation for the care of all patients through the coronavirus pandemic.
Keyphrases
- palliative care
- sars cov
- coronavirus disease
- decision making
- advanced cancer
- respiratory syndrome coronavirus
- public health
- big data
- end stage renal disease
- newly diagnosed
- ejection fraction
- healthcare
- prognostic factors
- peritoneal dialysis
- autism spectrum disorder
- chronic pain
- patient reported
- pain management
- health insurance