To contain COVID-19 spread, Italy is under a global lockdown since February 21, 2020, except for health services and food supply. In this scenario, growing apprehension concerning legal consequences is rising among health professionals due to several ethical and legal questions. Even if medical ethicists may approve patients’ prioritization protocols, hospitals and health professionals remain highly exposed to liability. The so-called smart-working may be very useful, but it may harbor potential legal harms for health personnel and patients and safety. Moreover, personal umbrella policies also often exclude liability arising out of the transmission of a communicable disease, especially a pandemic state, is declared. Under the pressure of medical associations, Italian Government political forces have very recently presented an amendment to the recently released ordinances for the COVID-19 emergency aimed to reduce medical liability. Presumably, similar epidemics or other wide-scale similar events may happen again in an unpredictable future. Therefore, more articulated legal regulations are strongly needed starting from lessons learned from this epidemic.

Gebbia V., Bordonaro R., Blasi L., Piazza D., Pellegrino A., Iacono C., et al. (2020). Liability of clinical oncologists and the COVID-19 emergency: Between hopes and concerns. JOURNAL OF CANCER POLICY, 25 [10.1016/j.jcpo.2020.100234].

Liability of clinical oncologists and the COVID-19 emergency: Between hopes and concerns

Gebbia V.
Primo
;
Bordonaro R.;Piazza D.;Firenze A.
Ultimo
2020-01-01

Abstract

To contain COVID-19 spread, Italy is under a global lockdown since February 21, 2020, except for health services and food supply. In this scenario, growing apprehension concerning legal consequences is rising among health professionals due to several ethical and legal questions. Even if medical ethicists may approve patients’ prioritization protocols, hospitals and health professionals remain highly exposed to liability. The so-called smart-working may be very useful, but it may harbor potential legal harms for health personnel and patients and safety. Moreover, personal umbrella policies also often exclude liability arising out of the transmission of a communicable disease, especially a pandemic state, is declared. Under the pressure of medical associations, Italian Government political forces have very recently presented an amendment to the recently released ordinances for the COVID-19 emergency aimed to reduce medical liability. Presumably, similar epidemics or other wide-scale similar events may happen again in an unpredictable future. Therefore, more articulated legal regulations are strongly needed starting from lessons learned from this epidemic.
2020
Gebbia V., Bordonaro R., Blasi L., Piazza D., Pellegrino A., Iacono C., et al. (2020). Liability of clinical oncologists and the COVID-19 emergency: Between hopes and concerns. JOURNAL OF CANCER POLICY, 25 [10.1016/j.jcpo.2020.100234].
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Utilizza questo identificativo per citare o creare un link a questo documento: https://hdl.handle.net/10447/439965
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