Institute for Medical Humanities, University of Bonn, Bonn, Germany.
Department of Philosophy I, Ruhr-University Bochum, Bochum, Germany.
Med Health Care Philos. 2023 Mar;26(1):37-48. doi: 10.1007/s11019-022-10120-0. Epub 2022 Nov 5.
Hospital acquired infections (HAIs) are a major threat to patient safety. This paper addresses the following question: given what is known about the causes of and possible interventions on HAIs, to whom or what should the moral responsibility for preventing these infections be attributed? First, we show how generating robust evidence on the effectiveness of preventive hygiene measures is a complex endeavour and review the existing evidence on the causes of HAIs. Second, we demonstrate that the existing literature on the ethical aspects of infection control has focused on responsibility at the individual-level. Thirdly, we argue that these accounts do not accommodate systemic factors relevant for HAI prevention. We show that the notion of collective responsibility is useful for making understandable how systemic factors, such as employment conditions in hospitals, are both causally and ethically relevant in infection control.
医院获得性感染(HAI)是对患者安全的重大威胁。本文探讨了以下问题:鉴于已知的 HAI 病因和可能的干预措施,应将预防这些感染的道德责任归咎于谁或什么?首先,我们展示了如何生成关于预防卫生措施有效性的有力证据是一项复杂的任务,并回顾了现有的 HAI 病因证据。其次,我们表明,关于感染控制伦理方面的现有文献主要集中在个人层面的责任上。第三,我们认为这些解释并没有包含与 HAI 预防相关的系统性因素。我们表明,集体责任的概念对于理解医院雇佣条件等系统性因素在感染控制中的因果关系和伦理相关性是有用的。