Non-consensual disclosure of infectious drug resistant tuberculosis status in the occupational context: Health workers stuck between a rock and a hard place

IF 0.5 Q4 MEDICAL ETHICS
C. Nnaji, S. Adams, L. London
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引用次数: 0

Abstract

Background The burden of drug-resistant tuberculosis (DR-TB) remains high in South Africa despite ongoing control efforts. DR-TB patients who are infectious and continue to work pose a substantial risk of spreading the disease at the workplace. When such patients refuse or interrupt treatment and are also unwilling to disclose their status at work they pose an infectious risk in the workplace, creating a conflict between public health good and individual human rights. Should health-workers breach confidentiality and disclose patients’ DR-TB status, or take no action while patients pose transmission risks in occupational settings? Objectives To provide professional and ethical guidance for health workers in dealing with non-consensual disclosure of DR-TB status of patients who are unwilling to disclose, continue to go to work and remain infectious. Methods A comprehensive literature search was conducted to draw on evidence relating to public health best practices and human rights normative standards. We used the findings, along with guidance from DR-TB programme managers, clinicians, occupational health physicians and human rights lawyers to develop an occupational health protocol for disclosure. Results This protocol establishes the normative, ethical and legal framework for dealing with the complexities of non-consensual disclosure and provides a set of practical standard operative procedures for health-workers in the South African setting. It also provides a legal safeguard to protect health-workers from potential litigation that may result from such duty. Conclusion Non-consensual disclosure to address the spread of DR-TB in occupational settings should be based on professional, ethical and legally-sound guidance for health-workers.
非自愿披露职业背景下的传染性耐药结核病状况:卫生工作者进退两难
背景尽管南非正在进行控制工作,但耐药结核病的负担仍然很高。具有传染性并继续工作的DR-TB患者在工作场所传播疾病的风险很大。当这些患者拒绝或中断治疗,也不愿意透露自己的工作状态时,他们在工作场所会构成传染风险,从而在公共卫生利益和个人人权之间产生冲突。卫生工作者是否应该违反保密规定,披露患者的DR-TB状态,或者在患者在职业环境中构成传播风险时不采取行动?目的为卫生工作者提供专业和道德指导,以处理不愿披露、继续上班和保持传染性的患者的DR-TB状态的非自愿披露。方法进行全面的文献检索,以获取与公共卫生最佳实践和人权规范标准有关的证据。我们利用这些发现,以及DR-TB项目经理、临床医生、职业健康医生和人权律师的指导,制定了一份职业健康协议,以供披露。结果本议定书为处理非自愿披露的复杂性建立了规范、道德和法律框架,并为南非的卫生工作者提供了一套实用的标准操作程序。它还提供了一种法律保障,以保护卫生工作者免受此类职责可能导致的潜在诉讼。结论应对DR-TB在职业环境中的传播进行非自愿披露,应基于对卫生工作者的专业、道德和法律健全的指导。
本文章由计算机程序翻译,如有差异,请以英文原文为准。
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来源期刊
CiteScore
1.10
自引率
11.10%
发文量
18
审稿时长
14 weeks
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