The COVID-19 Crisis and Clinical Ethics in New York City.
Fins J, Prager K. The COVID-19 Crisis and Clinical Ethics in New York City. The Journal Of Clinical Ethics 2020, 31: 228-232. PMID: 32773405, DOI: 10.1086/jce2020313228.Peer-Reviewed Original ResearchConceptsEthics consultationEthical challengesClinical ethics consultationClinical ethics servicesCrisis standards of careClinical ethicsEthical communityMedical futilityColumbia teamMoral distressCritical intelligenceEthics ServiceEthicsSenior hospital administratorsNewYork-PresbyterianInstitutional lifeCrisis standardsResource allocation questionsNew York CityExtraordinary circumstancesWeill CornellDisproportionate burden of COVID-19Collective responseMedical CenterColumbia campusDisability Rights as a Necessary Framework for Crisis Standards of Care and the Future of Health Care
Guidry-Grimes L, Savin K, Stramondo J, Reynolds J, Tsaplina M, Burke T, Ballantyne A, Kittay E, Stahl D, Scully J, Garland-Thomson R, Tarzian A, Dorfman D, Fins J. Disability Rights as a Necessary Framework for Crisis Standards of Care and the Future of Health Care. The Hastings Center Report 2020, 50: 28-32. PMID: 32596899, DOI: 10.1002/hast.1128.Peer-Reviewed Original ResearchConceptsCrisis standards of careDisability justiceCrisis standardsInclusion of disabled peopleJusticeRecognition justiceStandard of careEquitable processDisabled peopleDecision-makingInstitute of MedicineMovement demandsCrisisHealth careLawVision statementsProvider engagementFairnessCareCOVID-19InterestCrisis planningCommitmentDisaster situationsDisability