When Does the Cure Become Worse Than the Disease? Applying Cost-Benefit Analysis to the Covid-19 Recovery

By Derek Soled, Michelle Bayefsky and Rahul Nayak. Early in the Covid-19 outbreak in the United States, President Trump suggested that the cure – closing the American economy and sheltering at home – may be worse than the disease. Although he was criticized for focusing on the economy when so many lives were at stake, […]

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Children of COVID-19: Pawns, pathfinders or partners?

By Vic Larcher and Joe Brierley. Countries throughout the world are counting the health and socio-economic costs of the COVID-19 pandemic, including the strategies necessary to contain it. Profound consequences from social isolation are beginning to emerge, and there is an urgency about charting a path to recovery, albeit to a “new normal” that mitigates […]

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The UK Government’s COVID-19 legal strategy is compromising end-of-life ethics and human rights compliance

By Stephen Thomson. End-of-life ethics and the human rights of dying patients and their families are being compromised by the UK Government’s legal and communications response to COVID-19. Despite NHS England’s Visitor Guidance continuing to state that one immediate family member or carer will be permitted to visit a patient who is receiving end-of-life care, […]

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Lives vs equity – analysing the dilemma in the COVID-19 response

By Neil Pickering An ethical tension that COVID-19 highlights is between saving lives and acting equitably.  Bluntly, in the current circumstances, it may be that any weight given to equity will potentially cost lives.  This need not always be the case, of course.  The two can both be realised at one and the same time […]

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Compulsory treatment or vaccination versus quarantine

By Thomas Douglas, Jonathan Pugh and Lisa Forsberg. Governments worldwide have responded to the Covid-19 pandemic with sweeping constraints on freedom of movement, including various forms of isolation, quarantine, and ‘lockdown’. Governments have also introduced new legal instruments to guarantee the lawfulness of their measures. In the UK, the Coronavirus Act 2020 gives the government […]

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How much certainty is enough? Immunity passports and COVID-19

By Rebecca brown, Julian Savulescu, Bridget Williams and Dominic Wilkinson. There is significant debate about whether or not ‘immunity passports’ are a viable tool to use in responding to the current COVID-19 pandemic. Much of this has focused on the lack of a sufficiently reliable antibody test, and uncertainty about the immune status of individuals […]

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PPE may protect us, but it harms the sweatshop workers who make it

Arianne Shahvisi and Mei Trueba. One of the greatest controversies of the UK coronavirus crisis is the shortage of PPE for NHS workers. Yet most PPE is made in sweatshops, and its production endangers the health of those who make it. Ironically, workers who produce personal protective equipment for others invariably have inadequate protection themselves. […]

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