Deck 13: Pandemic Ethics
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Deck 13: Pandemic Ethics
1
To fully understand the moral questions involved with the COVID-19 pandemic, we must understand the nature of the
A) virus.
B) transmission rate.
C) danger.
D) financial costs.
A) virus.
B) transmission rate.
C) danger.
D) financial costs.
C
2
Those most likely to have very serious symptoms if they are infected with COVID-19 are _______ and people with pre-existing medical conditions.
A) teens
B) older people
C) children
D) middle-aged females
A) teens
B) older people
C) children
D) middle-aged females
B
3
COVID-19 is transmitted very easily from one person to another, mainly through
A) skin contact with someone who has COVID-19.
B) respiratory droplets produced by people with COVID-19.
C) sharing food with someone who has COVID-19.
D) contact with the blood of someone who has COVID-19.
A) skin contact with someone who has COVID-19.
B) respiratory droplets produced by people with COVID-19.
C) sharing food with someone who has COVID-19.
D) contact with the blood of someone who has COVID-19.
B
4
Which of the following is not a CDC (the Centers for Disease Control and Prevention) guideline for slowing the spread of the virus?
A) Wear a mask
B) Stay six feet from others who don't live with you
C) Refrain from exercise if you are infected
D) Avoid crowds
A) Wear a mask
B) Stay six feet from others who don't live with you
C) Refrain from exercise if you are infected
D) Avoid crowds
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5
Many _______ questions about COVID-19 appear when health care workers try to decide how to allocate scarce medical resources.
A) moral
B) legal
C) economic
D) academic
A) moral
B) legal
C) economic
D) academic
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6
Which of the following is not a factor which ethicists think must be avoided for consideration when allocating limited resources?
A) A person's wealth
B) A person's social status
C) A person's fame
D) A person's likelihood to survive
A) A person's wealth
B) A person's social status
C) A person's fame
D) A person's likelihood to survive
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7
The moral principle of _______ relates to a person's rational capacity for self-governance or self-determination.
A) equality
B) fairness
C) autonomy
D) respect for persons
A) equality
B) fairness
C) autonomy
D) respect for persons
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8
The moral principle of _______ relates to people getting what is fair or what is their due.
A) justice
B) autonomy
C) respect for persons
D) freedom
A) justice
B) autonomy
C) respect for persons
D) freedom
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9
The moral principle of _______ says that persons are possessors of ultimate inherent worth and must be treated as such.
A) justice
B) autonomy
C) freedom
D) respect for persons
A) justice
B) autonomy
C) freedom
D) respect for persons
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10
Many refuse to wear masks, social distance, or get the vaccine on the grounds that taking those precautions would
A) violate their rights.
B) be too much trouble.
C) not protect certain people.
D) be useless.
A) violate their rights.
B) be too much trouble.
C) not protect certain people.
D) be useless.
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11
According to Sandel, resistance to wearing a mask is not about public health but is about
A) politics.
B) justice.
C) lack of information.
D) effectiveness.
A) politics.
B) justice.
C) lack of information.
D) effectiveness.
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12
Which is not one of the four fundamental values related to allocation of resources discussed by Emanuel, Persad, Upshur, et al?
A) Maximizing the benefits
B) Treating people equally
C) Giving priority to those who can pay
D) Promoting and rewarding instrumental value
A) Maximizing the benefits
B) Treating people equally
C) Giving priority to those who can pay
D) Promoting and rewarding instrumental value
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13
Saving more lives and more years of life is consistent with
A) utilitarian ethical perspectives.
B) the law.
C) some medical protocols.
D) allocating on a first-come, first-served basis.
A) utilitarian ethical perspectives.
B) the law.
C) some medical protocols.
D) allocating on a first-come, first-served basis.
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14
Limited time and _______ in a COVID-19 pandemic make it justifiable to give priority to maximizing the number of patients that survive treatment with a reasonable life expectancy and to regard maximizing improvements in length of life as a subordinate aim.
A) money
B) information
C) health care workers
D) medication
A) money
B) information
C) health care workers
D) medication
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15
Emanuel, Persad, Upshur, et al argue that critical COVID-19 interventions such as testing, PPE, ICU beds, ventilators, therapeutics, and vaccines, should first go to
A) infected people most likely to survive.
B) infected people with underlying medical conditions.
C) front-line health care workers.
D) people who have won a lottery designed for random allocation.
A) infected people most likely to survive.
B) infected people with underlying medical conditions.
C) front-line health care workers.
D) people who have won a lottery designed for random allocation.
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16
First-come, first-served medication or vaccine distribution would
A) encourage crowding and even violence.
B) ensure fair allocation of resources.
C) be the most effective way to distribute resources.
D) help to increase survival rates.
A) encourage crowding and even violence.
B) ensure fair allocation of resources.
C) be the most effective way to distribute resources.
D) help to increase survival rates.
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17
Invoking the value of saving the maximum number of lives justifies giving _______ priority for vaccines immediately after health care workers and first responders.
A) young people
B) older persons
C) those who have already had COVID-19
D) teachers
A) young people
B) older persons
C) those who have already had COVID-19
D) teachers
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18
Many guidelines agree that the decision to withdraw a scarce resource, such as ventilators or ICU support, from one patient to save others is
A) murder.
B) illegal.
C) requires the patient's consent.
D) not an act of killing.
A) murder.
B) illegal.
C) requires the patient's consent.
D) not an act of killing.
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19
The COVID-19 pandemic is both a worldwide human tragedy and a moral catastrophe.
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20
COVID-19 is a coronavirus that hasn't been seen in humans before.
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21
COVID-19 provokes less serious illness than the flu but spreads faster.
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22
People infected with COVID-19 must be showing symptoms to spread the virus.
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23
Some people cannot get COVID-19 and cannot spread it.
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24
Getting a COVID-19 vaccine ensures that one cannot be infected with COVID-19.
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25
Getting vaccinated for COVID-19 yourself may also protect people around you.
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26
Getting a COVID-19 vaccine may help keep you from getting seriously ill even if you do get COVID-19.
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27
Maximizing benefits to patients can mean either saving the most lives or saving the most life-years.
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28
COVID-19 has also exposed fundamental moral issues relating to poor and minority communities.
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29
Segregation and other social and economic inequities have led to higher rates of African Americans contracting the coronavirus.
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30
The moral principle of autonomy relates to the ability to direct one's own life and choose for oneself.
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31
Philosophers agree that moral principles are absolute.
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32
Respect for persons is the moral principle which says that persons are possessors of ultimate inherent worth and must be treated as such.
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33
Many Americans consider mask mandates a violation of individual liberty.
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34
According to Sandel, American individualism is a strength in dealing with a pandemic.
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35
According to Sandel, the single greatest responsibility of leaders in times of crisis is to inspire trust.
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36
Although medical treatment in the United States is often restricted to those able to pay, no proposal endorses ability-to-pay allocation in a pandemic.
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37
The value of treating people equally in a pandemic could be attempted by random selection, such as a lottery.
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38
In the context of a pandemic, the value of maximizing benefits is least important.
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39
Emanuel, Persad, Upshur, et al believe that removing a patient from a ventilator or an ICU bed to provide it to others in need is justifiable.
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40
According to Emanuel, Persad, Upshur, et al, there should be no difference in allocating scarce resources between patients with COVID-19 and those with other medical conditions.
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41
What are some of the moral questions specific to the COVID-19 pandemic? Which do you think are most important? Least important?
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42
What are some of the facts about COVID-19 that make it so complicated to deal with from a moral perspective?
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43
What are some of the facts about the vaccine that relate to moral questions about getting vaccinated?
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44
What are some moral questions faced by health care workers specifically?
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45
What are some of the moral principles that must be balanced when making decisions about allocating resources in a pandemic? Do you think certain principles are more important to consider than others?
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46
Discuss the approaches to allocating resources that ethicists agree should not be used. Do you agree? Explain.
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47
What is meant by operationalizing the value of maximizing benefits? How does this impact decision-making when treating people for COVID-19?
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48
Respond to the following quote from Laurie Zoloth, an ethicist at the University of Chicago: "Freedom should not come at the expense of justice. In America, we once had a vision of freedom in which sacrifice was inherent: People sacrificed their very lives for the freedom of others. We've let that vision devolve into one of mere personal preference." Do you agree with her? Disagree? Explain.
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49
According to Sandel, what are our moral obligations while dealing with the pandemic? Do you disagree with any of his claims about our obligations?
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50
What reasons does Sandel give for why American attitudes about self-sacrifice are different now from what they were during other difficult periods in American history? Do you agree with him about current attitudes?
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51
Sandel says that trust matters a great deal in a pandemic. What does he mean by this? Do you agree with him?
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52
Respond to the following from Sandel: "From the outset of this crisis, we've heard the slogan, 'We are all in this together.' We hear it from politicians, advertisers, and celebrities. It evokes our mutual dependence and vulnerability in the face of COVID-19. It points to an inspiring ideal. But it rings hollow, because we know it doesn't describe the facts on the ground." What examples does he give in support of his claim?
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53
What are the four fundamental values related to allocation of resources discussed by Emanuel, Persad, Upshur, et al? Explain what each means.
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54
Emanuel, Persad, Upshur, et al write "[u]ndoubtedly, withdrawing ventilators or ICU support from patients who arrived earlier to save those with better prognosis will be extremely psychologically traumatic for clinicians - and some clinicians might refuse to do so. However, many guidelines agree that the decision to withdraw a scarce resource to save others is not an act of killing and does not require the patient's consent." What is your response to this claim? Do your views change if the person in question is yourself? A family member?
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55
Emanuel, Persad, Upshur, et al write "we believe guidelines should be provided at a higher level of authority, both to alleviate physician burden and to ensure equal treatment." What is your response to this claim? Do you agree that authority about such matters should not be given to physicians? Explain.
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