• Scand J Trauma Resus · Oct 2016

    Are ethical norms and current policies still relevant in face of the recent mass terror events?

    • Tomer Simon, Avishay Goldberg, and Bruria Adini.
    • Emergency Medicine Department, Recanati School of Community Health Professions, Faculty of Health Sciences, Ben-Gurion University of the Negev, Beersheba, Israel. tomersi@asonot.org.il.
    • Scand J Trauma Resus. 2016 Oct 4; 24 (1): 118.

    AbstractThe widespread utilization of social media in recent terror attacks in major European cities should raise a "red flag" for the emergency medical response teams. The question arises as to the impact of social media during terror events on the healthcare system. Information was published well before any emergency authority received a distress call or was requested to respond. Photos published at early stages of the attacks, through social media were uncensored, presenting identifiable pictures of victims. Technological advancements of recent years decrease and remove barriers that enable the public to use them as they see fit. These attacks raise ethical considerations for the patients and their rights as they were outsourced from the medical community, into the hands of the public. The healthcare system should leverage social media and its advantages in designing response to terror, but this requires a re-evaluation and introspection into the current emergency response models.

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