1 / 16

Introduction to HIV and Ethics

Introduction to HIV and Ethics. Amy Lynn Payne, BA. Tete: MSF center for HIV vertical transmission programme. Principles of Medical Ethics. Nonmaleficence- “Above all, do no harm” Beneficence- Act only to provide a benefit Autonomy - Act in accord with the will of the individual

Télécharger la présentation

Introduction to HIV and Ethics

An Image/Link below is provided (as is) to download presentation Download Policy: Content on the Website is provided to you AS IS for your information and personal use and may not be sold / licensed / shared on other websites without getting consent from its author. Content is provided to you AS IS for your information and personal use only. Download presentation by click this link. While downloading, if for some reason you are not able to download a presentation, the publisher may have deleted the file from their server. During download, if you can't get a presentation, the file might be deleted by the publisher.

E N D

Presentation Transcript


  1. Introduction to HIV and Ethics Amy Lynn Payne, BA Tete: MSF center for HIV vertical transmission programme

  2. Principles of Medical Ethics • Nonmaleficence- “Above all, do no harm” • Beneficence- Act only to provide a benefit • Autonomy - Act in accord with the will of the individual • Utility– Act in a way to bring about the greatest benefit and the least harm

  3. Ethical Issues • Confidentiality • Research • Distributive Justice • Testing • Public Health (individual autonomy vs. interest of the public) • Needle Exchange (Prevention and public values)

  4. Distributive Justice • Principle of Equality-to each the same • Principle of Effort-to each according to his or her effort • Principle of Contribution-to each according to contribution • Principle of Need-to each according to her or his needs

  5. Confidentiality • Importance of Health Care Provider-Patient Relationship • Stigma associated with HIV status • Confidentiality ≠ anonymity

  6. Clinical Research • Grassroots movement changing research ideals • Conflict between researcher and physician • Therapeutic obligation • Placebo use = Withholding treatment • Equipoise

  7. Changes in Research due to HIV • Large grass roots movement • ACTUP • Move to include new treatment exclusive arm

  8. Language and Public Perceptions • Compliance to adherence • Patient to subject to participant

  9. Distribution of Health Care Resources • Huge gap between developing and developed nations • Access to specialists, testing, and tertiary care facilities • Controversy over cost highlighting the lack of accord between pharmaceutical industry and public health goals.

  10. Fatal Imbalance: Research and Development of New Therapies • 10% of research goes to test therapies that effect 90% of the world • Diseases that effect the poor, particularly tropical diseases, attract very little attention from the pharmaceutical and research community

  11. AIDS in Africa • 2.4 million (est.) dead in 2002 • 29.4 million (est.) infected Villagers in Masogo, Kenya attend a funeral for a suspected AIDS victim.

  12. Perinatal Transmission • Transmission from mother to fetus approx. 25% baseline in the absence of ARV. • 076 ACTG protocol, AZT monotherapy, dropped rates to about 8%. • Modified 076 protocol tested in developing world reduced rates to about 11% • Triple ARV reduces transmission to >2%

  13. Perinatal Transmission: Breast-Feeding • WHO estimates 10-20% transmission rate through breast-feeding. • Prevention thought problematic in developing countries • Conflict with promotion of breast-feeding • Lack of access to formula • Safe supplies of water • Social stigma associated with formula use

  14. Perinatal Transmission Studies in Developing Countries • 16 studies in developing countries-15 using placebo controls • Modified 076 protocol-cheaper and simpler • Placebo controls = withholding therapy? • When is it nonexploitative to accept lower standards of care? • Consent issues? • “Reasonable availability”

  15. Substance Abuse and HIV • Needle exchange programs: • Politically unpopular? • Public Health necessity? • NIMBY • Endorsing/Accepting drug use

  16. Reaching at-risk populations • Prison populations thought to be at risk due to in house use of drugs and risky sexual practices • European and Australian prison systems set up needle exchange programs • American prisons rarely keep (or admit) numbers on in house transmission of HIV

More Related