The National Resource Center on Advancing Emergency Preparedness for Culturally Diverse Communities
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Public Health Ethics in Disasters

Organization(s):University of North Carolina Gillings School of Global Public Health
Year: 2010
Available at:www.sph.unc.edu/ethics/public_health_ethics_in_disasters/   (report broken link)
Description:

Disasters present ethical challenges because they are sudden and affect many people all at once. For example, the need to respond quickly can lead to the neglect of individual rights in the interest of protecting the community. And a lack of coordination among the many agencies and nongovernmental organizations that rush to the scene can exacerbate problems rather than relieve them.

This website provides a starting place for understanding common public health ethics issues in disasters. For each issue listed in the menu to the left, we tell you what it is, what makes it ethical, commonly cited guidelines and principles, and links to additional resources.
Language(s):English
Communities:General
Subtopic:
Phase 6 - Response
Phase 7 - Recovery
Emergency Decision Making
Target Audience:First Responders; Emergency Planners & Managers; Public Health Professionals
Resource Type:
Resource Guide
Contact Info:

James C. Thomas, MPH, PhD
Associate Professor of Epidemiology

Director of the Program in Public Health Ethics
Telephone: 919-966-7434
Email: Jim.Thomas @ unc.edu.