Daily Mirror

Decisions on coronaviru­s must be guided by ethics

-

The mantra from ministers is “we follow the science”. But the increasing failure to serve all people of the nation equally suggests there should be another and equally important mantra – “we follow the ethics”.

I’m increasing­ly disturbed by the unfairness in the way the Government is tackling the pandemic. Its lack of transparen­cy about how decisions are being made is also a cause for concern.

Just because the Government says it follows the science, we shouldn’t automatica­lly think science leads the way. It doesn’t. It provides informatio­n to politician­s who then take decisions.

Not only are scientists unqualifie­d to make political decisions, it’s unfair to shift responsibi­lity on to them, according to Zoe Fritz of Cambridge University and colleagues writing in the BMJ.

The Government seems unaware that besides public health and political responsibi­lities it has the responsibi­lity for ethically sound decisions.

The current approach is haphazard and efforts are often duplicated. There seems to be no clear leadership, no coordinati­on, but most of all there’s precious little transparen­cy about the ethics underpinni­ng decisions.

Fritz’s team advocates three major ethical considerat­ions. The first recommenda­tion is something I think all of us have longed for – transparen­cy. Most of the Government’s pronouncem­ents have been and continue to be cloaked in secrecy and confusion.

We must demand transparen­cy and that the reasons behind decisions be made publicly available.

If only the Government realised transparen­cy is a strength not a weakness.

Transparen­cy would help strengthen wellcoordi­nated, well-funded decisions so that they could be justified and accepted. Ethics can enhance the clarity, consistenc­y, and justificat­ion of decisions made.

Secondly, we already have clinical ethics committees throughout the country that, among other things, make sure all medical research projects are ethically sound.

There’s already a proposal to increase access to clinical ethics committees throughout NHS hospitals.

Just think of the light that could have been shone on inequaliti­es of frontline workers early on in the pandemic if ethical practices had been embedded across the health and social care system, and not just in hospitals.

Thirdly, the UK has a wealth of expertise in healthcare ethics, backed by organisati­ons such as the Nuffield Council on Bioethics, the Wellcome Trust, and research councils.

We’re in dire need of research on the ethical dimensions of the pandemic.

These organisati­ons could coordinate to commission ethical research and help answer the many ethical questions about pandemic responses. We need to follow the ethics, not just the science.

All stakeholde­rs should follow ethical principles, uphold ethical standards and be publicly accountabl­e for the decisions they make.

‘‘

There seems to be no clear leadership or transparen­cy

 ??  ??

Newspapers in English

Newspapers from United Kingdom