Principlist Pandemics: On Fraud Ethical Guidelines and the Importance of Transparency

Jonathan Lewis, Udo Schüklenk

Research output: Chapter in Book/Conference proceedingChapterpeer-review

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Abstract

The COVID-19 pandemic has coincided with the proliferation of ethical guidance documents to assist public health authorities, health care providers, practitioners and staff with responding to ethical challenges posed by the pandemic. Like ethical guidelines relating to infectious disease that have preceded them, what unites many COVID-19 guidance documents is their dependency on an under-developed approach to bioethical principlism, a normative framework that attempts to guide actions based on a list of prima facie, unranked ethical principles. In this chapter, we aim to explore the limits and limitations of pandemic ethical guidance documents as, specifically, ethics documents—documents that fulfil the functions of ethics as a fundamentally normative discipline. This means not only determining whether such ethical guidance documents can, in principle, provide adequate action guidance and action justification, but also, more importantly where pandemics are concerned, determining whether they support consistent decision making and transparent processes of justification. Having highlighted the problems with merely furnishing ethical guidelines with substantive ethical content in terms of principles and values, we argue that organizations that develop these documents should focus on the procedural dimensions of action guidance and action justification, which extend to questions regarding the make-up of the committees, panels and groups that develop such guidelines, the public transparency of justifications for specific pandemic-related advice or interventions and the development of explicit procedures for transparent and consistent decision making.
Original languageEnglish
Title of host publicationEthical Public Health Policy Within Pandemics
Subtitle of host publicationTheory and Practice in Ethical Pandemic Administration
EditorsMichael Boylan
Place of PublicationCham
PublisherSpringer Nature
Chapter8
Pages131-148
Number of pages18
Volume95
Edition1
ISBN (Electronic)9783030996925
ISBN (Print)978-3-030-99691-8
DOIs
Publication statusPublished - 24 Jun 2022

Publication series

NameInternational Library of Bioethics
PublisherSpringer
Volume95
ISSN (Print)2662-9186
ISSN (Electronic)2662-9194

Keywords

  • COVID-19
  • Pandemic Ethics
  • Principlism
  • ethical guidelines
  • Ethics expert
  • Rawls
  • WHO
  • public health ethics

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