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- Frank A Chervenak and Laurence B McCullough.
- Department of Obstetrics and Gynecology at New York Presbyterian Hospital-Weill Cornell Medical College, New York City, USA.
- J Clin Ethics. 2011 Jan 1; 22 (1): 20-4.
AbstractThe ethics of managing obstetric patients in medical disasters poses ethical challenges that are unique in comparison to other disaster patients, because the medical needs of two patients--the pregnant patient and the fetal patient--must be considered. We provide an ethical framework for doing so. We base the framework on the justice-based prevention of exploitation of populations of patients, both obstetric and non-obstetric, in medical disasters. We use the concept of exploitation to identify a spectrum from ethically acceptable, to ethically challenging, to ethically unacceptable, management of obstetric patients in medical disasters. We also address the ethics of the care of obstetric and neonatal patients when the resources of a hospital are completely overwhelmed in a large-scale medical disaster.
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