Site icon Lawful Legal

Navigating Ethical Dilemmas in Access to Healthcare

Navigating Ethical Dilemmas in Access to Healthcare

Author: Aney Verma, Symbiosis Law School, Noida.

Abstract

Access to healthcare for everyone should be free and fair. Access to healthcare raises some fundamental concerns like finance, medical structure, ethical dilemmas, and politics. Generally, people presume healthcare means medical treatment provided by a trained professional. The issue of access to healthcare only arises for the middle class or poor class because the rich class has all the resources and money to get the best healthcare that is available, but this situation changed during COVID-19. During COVID-19, every section of society faced the issue of access to healthcare, and several ethical dilemmas occurred during COVID-19. Society always talks about access to healthcare every day but never takes the step to achieve it. The national government never focused on the need to improve and increase the infrastructure of healthcare. Access to healthcare has two faces: one that helps society and the poor maintain their health, and the other is its cost, impact on business, unemployment, etc.

A few questions arise when an individual hears the concept of access to healthcare. These questions are:

Why is access to healthcare important? Access to healthcare affects a person’s, community’s, or class’s well-being. Regular and reliable access to healthcare will reduce the spread of the virus and help detect and treat the disease early. What is access to healthcare? Access to healthcare means any person could enjoy the benefits of the healthcare system without facing any type of hindrance. What is the hindrance to access to healthcare? There are several, but a financial hindrance and a lack of medical personnel are the main hindrances. Is it possible for him to gain access to healthcare? On one look, this concept looks achievable, but when you deep dive into it, you realise this concept is a full hindrance and an ethical dilemma.

Access to health care 

As we mentioned, easy and free healthcare is the true meaning of access to healthcare. Different countries face different problems while implementing access to healthcare.





Ethical dilemma

An ethical dilemma is a moral situation in which an individual has to choose between two or more conflicting values. An individual will face a situation in which he or she will have to choose and compromise his or her morality. The problem with ethical dilemmas is that there is no 100% correct answer. In morality, nothing is black or white; everything is grey. An individual has to choose according to his moral values.

The ethical dilemmas in access to healthcare and healthcare are as follows:

Conclusion and Analysis

Each and every individual in his or her life has to face some ethical dilemmas. The individual has to choose between those ethical dilemmas. As it is mentioned in ethics, there is no correct answer to an ethical dilemma.

The COVID-19 pandemic shows the true colour of healthcare, but the key issue is the shortage of medical equipment, etc., which caused the scenario in which ethical dilemmas occurred. Countering the present scenario, which leads to questions about ethical dilemmas in the future, is easier than facing the ethical dilemmas.

An individual will have to choose between two or more ethical dilemmas and face the benefits and consequences of his choice.

Bibliography 

Charlene A. Galarneau, The Ethics of Access to Health Care, JSTOR (Nov. 1, 2021, 10:00 AM), https://www.jstor.org/stable/23561093?Search=yes&result ItemClick=true&search Text=The% 20Ethics%20of% 20Access%20to% 20Health% 20Care&search Uri=% 2Faction% 2FdoBasicSearch% 3FQuery%3DThe% 2BEthics%2Bof% 2BAccess%2Bto%2BHealth% 2BCare%26so% 3D rel&ab_segments=0% 2Fbasic_search_gsv2% 2Fcontrol&refreqid=fastly-default%3A76452c41e09788053ded2c0b9231d67b

Hassan Chamsi-Pasha, Majed Chamsi-Pasha, Mohammad A Albar, Ethical dilemmas in the era of COVID-19, GEORG THIEME VERLAG KG (Nov. 1, 2021, 11:00 AM), https://www.thieme-connect.de/products/ejournals/html/10.4103/AJM.AJM_119_20.

Exit mobile version