Mehta Ambar, Quinn Thomas C
Johns Hopkins University School of Medicine, Baltimore, MD.
Johns Hopkins University School of Medicine, Baltimore, MD; Johns Hopkins University Center for Global Health, Baltimore, MD; Division of Intramural Research, National Institute of Allergy and Infectious Diseases, NIH, Bethesda, MD.
Pathog Immun. 2016;1(1):1-11. doi: 10.20411/pai.v1i1.60.
The Ebola epidemic in West Africa sparked many ethical and polarizing public health questions on how to adequately control transmission of the virus. These deliberations had and will continue to influence patients, healthcare workers, public perceptions of disease, and governmental responses. Such extensive and potential ramifications warranted an analysis of prior epidemics to sufficiently inform policy makers and prepare them and other authorities for future epidemics. We analyzed how the general public, medical institutions, federal government, and patients themselves responded during the early stages of the AIDS pandemic in two different countries and cultures, the United States and India.
Our analysis identified four key findings pertaining to the human rights of patients and healthcare workers and to the crucial roles of the government and medical community. The first demands that authoritative officials acknowledge the presence of high-risk behaviors and properly educate the public without stigmatizing groups of individuals. For this task, the medical community and federal government must form and display to the public a respectful and collaborative partnership towards battling the epidemic. These two synergistic endeavors will then allow appropriate officials to implement effective, yet civil, interventions for limiting transmission. Finally, the same officials must ensure that their interventions maintain the human rights of high-risk populations and of healthcare workers.
Applying these findings to future epidemics of infectious diseases can aid policy makers in navigating complicated ethical and public health questions, and help prevent them from repeating past mistakes in handling epidemics.
西非的埃博拉疫情引发了许多关于如何充分控制病毒传播的伦理及引发两极分化的公共卫生问题。这些讨论已经并将继续影响患者、医护人员、公众对疾病的认知以及政府的应对措施。如此广泛且潜在的影响使得对既往疫情进行分析变得必要,以便为政策制定者提供充分信息,并让他们及其他当局为未来的疫情做好准备。我们分析了美国和印度这两个不同国家和文化背景下,公众、医疗机构、联邦政府以及患者自身在艾滋病大流行早期阶段的应对情况。
我们的分析确定了与患者和医护人员人权以及政府和医疗界关键作用相关的四个主要发现。第一点要求权威官员承认高风险行为的存在,并在不污名化特定人群的情况下对公众进行适当教育。对于这项任务,医疗界和联邦政府必须建立并向公众展示一种在抗击疫情方面相互尊重且协作的伙伴关系。这两项协同努力将使相关官员能够实施有效且文明的干预措施以限制传播。最后,这些官员必须确保他们的干预措施维护高风险人群和医护人员的人权。
将这些发现应用于未来的传染病疫情,有助于政策制定者应对复杂的伦理和公共卫生问题,并防止他们在处理疫情时重蹈覆辙。