Home
Scholarly Works
The ethics of mandatory vaccination against...
Journal article

The ethics of mandatory vaccination against influenza for health care workers

Abstract

Vaccination of health care workers (HCW) in long-term care results in indirect protection of patients who are at high-risk for influenza. The voluntary uptake of influenza vaccination among HCW is generally low. We argue that institutions caring for frail elderly have the responsibility to implement voluntary programmes for vaccination against influenza of HCW. When uptake falls short a mandatory programme may be justified. The main justification stems from the duty of care givers not to harm one's patient when one knows there is a significant risk of harm and the intervention to reduce this chance has a favourable balance of benefit over burdens and risks.

Authors

van Delden JJM; Ashcroft R; Dawson A; Marckmann G; Upshur R; Verweij MF

Journal

Vaccine, Vol. 26, No. 44, pp. 5562–5566

Publisher

Elsevier

Publication Date

October 16, 2008

DOI

10.1016/j.vaccine.2008.08.002

ISSN

0264-410X

Contact the Experts team