A qualitative study of paramedic duty to treat during disaster response

Document Type

Journal Article

Publication Title

Disaster Medicine and Public Health Preparedness

Publisher

Cambridge University Press

School

School of Medical and Health Sciences

RAS ID

27185

Comments

Smith, E., Burkle, F., Gebbie, K., Ford, D., & Bensimon, C. (2018). A qualitative study of paramedic duty to treat during disaster response. Disaster Medicine and Public Health Preparedness, 13(2), 191-196.

Available here.

Abstract

Objectives
Disasters place unprecedented demands on emergency medical services and can test paramedics personal commitment as health care professionals. Despite this challenge, guidelines and codes of ethics are largely silent on the issue, providing little to no guidance on what is expected of paramedics or how they ought to approach their duty to treat in the face of risk. The objective of this research is to explore how paramedics view their duty to treat during disasters. Methods
The authors employed qualitative methods to gather Australian paramedic perspectives. Results
Our findings suggest that paramedic decisions around duty to treat will largely depend on individual perception of risk and competing obligations. A code of ethics for paramedics would be useful, but ultimately each paramedic will interpret these suggested guidelines based on individual values and the situational context.
Conclusions

Coming to an understanding of the legal issues involved and the ethical-social expectations in advance of a disaster may assist paramedics to respond willingly and appropriately.

DOI

10.1017/dmp.2018.15

Access Rights

free_to_read

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