Visitor restrictions during the COVID-19 pandemic: An ethical case study

Author:

Hartigan Irene11ORCID,Kelleher Ann21,McCarthy Joan1,Cornally Nicola1

Affiliation:

1. University College Cork, Ireland

2. South/Southwest Hospital Group, HSE, Ireland

Abstract

To prevent and reduce the transmission of the coronavirus to vulnerable populations, the World Health Organization recommended the restriction of visitors to nursing homes. It was recognised that such restrictions could have profound impact on residents and their families. Nonetheless, these measures were strictly imposed over a prolonged period in many countries; impeding families from remaining involved in their relatives’ care and diluting the meaningful connections for residents with society. It is timely to explore the impact of public health measures on people living in nursing homes from an ethical perspective. In order to foreground the ethical dimensions of the implications of visitor restrictions in nursing homes, we compiled an ethical case that reflects some recent experiences of nursing homes residents and their families, in the Irish Republic. We describe a series of events encountered by a woman and her family during the first wave of the pandemic in 2020 and we deploy an ethical decision-making tool to guide and structure our analysis. Our case analysis draws attention to ethical principles that are relevant to explicating the ethical duties and obligations that arise in relation to the interests, well-being, and safety of residents and their families, as well as nursing home staff and the wider community during a pandemic. These include the right of autonomy, trust, minimising harm, and proportionality. We conclude that a number of different strategies should be adopted by nursing homes and relevant regulatory bodies. This includes honest, regular communication between the nursing home staff, the resident and their family. Central to communications is the resident’s wishes, their current clinical status and the all-important wider public health obligations. National strategies include mass vaccination, the timely provision of guidance documents and interventions from regulatory bodies that are patient-centred, adaptable, and cost effective.

Publisher

SAGE Publications

Subject

Issues, ethics and legal aspects

Reference42 articles.

1. World Health Organization. Coronavirus disease (COVID-19) weekly epidemiological and operational, 9 February 2021, https://www.who.int/publications/m/item/weekly-epidemiological-update-9-february-2021 (accessed 14 February 2021).

2. Department of Health Ireland. COVID-19 nursing homes expert panel: final report, 2020, https://www.gov.ie/en/publication/3af5a-covid-19-nursing-homes-expert-panel-final-report/ (accessed 15 December 2020).

3. Low L-F, Hinsliff-Smith K, Sinha S, et al. Safe visiting at care homes during COVID-19: a review of international guidelines and emerging practices during the COVID-19 pandemic, https://ltccovid.org/2021/01/19/safe-visiting-at-care-homes-during-covid-19-a-review-of-international-guidelines-and-emerging-practices-during-the-covid-19-pandemic/

4. Hardy OJ, Dubourg D, Bourguignon M, et al. A world apart: levels and factors of excess mortality due to COVID-19 in care homes. The case of Wallonia-Belgium. Medrxiv, 2020, https://www.medrxiv.org/content/10.1101/2020.08.29.20183210v1

5. Epidemiology of Covid-19 in a Long-Term Care Facility in King County, Washington

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