Warren Alpert Medical School of Brown University, Providence, RI.
Assistant Professor of Obstetrics and Gynecology, Warren Alpert Medical School of Brown University, Providence, RI.
R I Med J (2013). 2022 Apr 1;105(3):28-32.
The opioid epidemic has renewed debate about how to structure laws, agency policies and hospital protocols for mandatory reporting of illicit substances during pregnancy. This paper analyzes the ethics of Rhode Island's approach to mandatory reporting - in particular, reporting of positive maternal and newborn drug tests at time of delivery. Given that state intervention is generally perceived by pregnant people as punitive and threatening to their family, we consider how four elements often used to justify punitive action by the state - retribution, deterrence, rehabilitation, and incapacitation (societal protection) - apply to Rhode Island's policy and approach to prenatal substance use. In addition, the paper considers the equity implications of Rhode Island's approach. It concludes that, given the potential for the policy to do more harm than good, investment of resources would be better spent on clinical and community services that support substance using parents and their newborns.
阿片类药物泛滥问题再次引发了关于如何构建法律、机构政策和医院规程以强制报告孕妇体内非法物质的辩论。本文分析了罗得岛州强制报告的伦理问题——特别是在分娩时报告产妇和新生儿药物检测呈阳性的情况。鉴于国家干预通常被孕妇视为惩罚性的,对其家庭构成威胁,我们考虑了经常用于证明国家采取惩罚性行动的四个要素——报复、威慑、康复和剥夺能力(社会保护)——如何适用于罗得岛州的产前药物使用政策和方法。此外,本文还考虑了该政策的公平性影响。它的结论是,鉴于该政策可能弊大于利,因此更好的做法是将资源投入到支持使用药物的父母及其新生儿的临床和社区服务上。