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Wednesday 1 April 2020 10:48am

Personal protective equipment for front-line health workers is an ethical imperative, University of Otago ethicist Dr Elizabeth Fenton says.

Elizabeth Fenton image
Dr Elizabeth Fenton.

In a blog just published on the Journal of Medical Ethics website, Dr Fenton questions whether healthcare institutions are fulfilling their reciprocal obligations to protect their most vulnerable staff with personal protective equipment (PPE) from gloves and masks to respirators and face shields.

“Many staff are being advised to wear PPE only when caring for patients with confirmed or suspected cases of COVID-19. But if infected patients who are not symptomatic (and who therefore may not have been tested, so are neither suspected nor confirmed) can spread the virus, this advice suggests a potentially dangerous underuse of PPE.”

A Lecturer in the Bioethics Centre at the Dunedin School of Medicine, Dr Fenton’s research interests include the ethical, political and social dimensions of public health and health policy. Her blog was published yesterday prior to the Government’s announcement that more PPE would be made available to front-line health workers and she is grateful for the Government’s action.

“If healthcare workers do not feel protected by the type of quantity of PPE provided, we can no longer expect them to come to work,” Dr Fenton says.

“Our healthcare institutions must give their staff the best chance of protecting themselves from the most severe forms of COVID-19.”

She points out that in Italy about 9 per cent of COVID-19 cases are health workers and at least 37 doctors have died from the disease. In China, an estimated 3000 health workers have become infected and at least 13 have died, thought that number may be higher.

COVID-19 is highly infectious in hospital settings and some settings are much more dangerous than others, Dr Fenton explains.

“Operating theatres, for example, are particularly problematic because the virus can be widely distributed through the intubation process and also through the spread of the patient’s bodily fluids around the room.

“Aerosol spread means the virus will remain on surfaces in the room, including the walls and ceiling. It is not surprising that surgeons are concerned about the implications for risk-exposure in theatre. One surgeon from the UK notes that ‘very soon all our operating theatres will be covered in COVID-19’.”

It is critical during a public health emergency that the ethical value of ‘reciprocity’ is maintained, Dr Fenton says.

“It is the value that underpins our individual responsibilities to help one another, and to fulfil professional responsibilities we have to our society. But reciprocity also means providing the support necessary to ensure those with professional responsibilities can fulfill them safely, without taking on undue risks,” she says.

“The expectation that healthcare workers will turn up to work during a pandemic depends on hospitals and the institutions that govern them meeting their reciprocal obligation to minimise the risks to which those workers are exposed.”

Check out Dr Fenton’s blog

For further information, contact

Dr Elizabeth Fenton
Lecturer, Bioethics Centre
Dunedin School of Medicine
Email elizabeth.fenton@otago.ac.nz

Liane Topham-Kindley
Senior Communications Adviser
University of Otago
Tel +64 3 479 9065
Mob +64 21 279 9065
Email liane.topham-kindley@otago.ac.nz

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