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Ethical analyses of institutional measures to increase health care worker influenza vaccination rates

机译:对提高医护人员流感疫苗接种率的制度措施的伦理分析

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Health care worker (HCW) influenza vaccination rates are modest. This paper provides a detailed ethical analysis of the major options to increase HCW vaccination rates, comparing how major ethical theories would address the options. The main categories of interventions to raise rates include education, incentives, easy access, competition with rewards, assessment and feedback, declination, mandates with alternative infection control measures, and mandates with administrative action as consequences. The aforementioned interventions, except mandates, arouse little ethical controversy. However, these efforts are time and work intensive and rarely achieve vaccination rates higher than about 70%. The primary concerns voiced about mandates are loss of autonomy, injustice, lack of due process, and subsuming the individual for institutional ends. Proponents of mandates argue that they are ethical based on beneficence, non-maleficence, and duty. A number of professional associations support mandates. Arguments by analogy can be made by mandates for HCW vaccination against other diseases. The ethical systems used in the analyses include evolutionary ethics, utilitarianism, principalism (autonomy, beneficence, non-maleficence, and justice), Kantism, and altruism. Across these systems, the most commonly preferred options are easy access, assessment and feedback, declinations, and mandates with infection control measures as consequences for non-compliance. Given the ethical imperatives of non-maleficence and beneficence, the limited success of lower intensive interventions, and the need for putting patient safety ahead of HCW convenience, mandates with additional infection control measures as consequences for non-compliance are preferred. For those who opt out of vaccination due to conscience concerns, such mandates provide a means to remain employed but not put patient safety at risk
机译:卫生保健工作者(HCW)的流感疫苗接种率不高。本文对提高HCW疫苗接种率的主要方案进行了详细的伦理分析,比较了主要伦理理论如何解决这些方案。提高利率的干预措施的主要类别包括教育,激励措施,容易获得,与奖励竞争,评估和反馈,偏差,采取替代性感染控制措施的要求以及以行政行动为后果的要求。除授权外,上述干预措施在道德上几乎没有引起争议。然而,这些努力是时间和工作密集的并且很少实现高于约70%的疫苗接种率。对任务授权表达的主要关切是丧失自治权,不公正,缺乏正当程序以及将个人归为机构目的。支持者认为,它们是基于仁慈,非恶意和义务的道德观念。一些专业协会支持任务。类推的论点可以由针对其他疾病的HCW疫苗接种授权来进行。分析中使用的伦理体系包括进化伦理,功利主义,原则主义(自治,仁慈,非恶意和正义),康德主义和利他主义。在这些系统中,最通常首选的选项是易于访问,评估和反馈,拒绝和强制执行感染控制措施,以作为不合规的后果。考虑到非恶意和慈善行为的伦理学迫切性,低强度干预措施的成功有限以及需要在HCW便利性之前确保患者安全,因此建议采取额外的感染控制措施,以应对违规行为。对于出于良心考虑而选择不接种疫苗的人,此类强制性规定提供了继续就业但不会使患者安全受到威胁的手段

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  • 来源
    《Vaccine》 |2013年第52期|共5页
  • 作者

    Zimmerman Richard K.;

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