Vaccine. 2007 Mar 1;25(11):2019-2026.<SCRIPT language=JavaScript1.2><!--var PopUpMenu2_LocalConfig_jsmenu3Config = [ ["ShowCloseIcon","yes"], ["Help","window.open('/entrez/query/static/popup.html','Links_Help','resizable=no,scrollbars= yes,toolbar=no,location=no,directories=no,status=n o,menubar=no,copyhistory=no,alwaysRaised=no,depend =no,width=400,height=500');"], ["FrameTarget","_top"], ["TitleText"," Links "]]var jsmenu3Config = [ ["UseLocalConfig","jsmenu3Config","",""]]//--></SCRIPT><SCRIPT language=JavaScript1.2><!--var Menu17258359 = [ ["UseLocalConfig","jsmenu3Config","",""], ["LinkOut","http://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/entrez/query.fcgi?itool=pubmed_AbstractPlus&cmd=Retrieve& db=pubmed&list_uids=17258359&dopt=ExternalLink","" ,""]]//--></SCRIPT>
Rationing of influenza vaccine during a pandemic: Ethical analyses.
Zimmerman RK.
<DD class=abstract id=abstract17258359>Department of Family Medicine and Clinical Epidemiology, University of Pittsburgh School of Medicine, 35l8 Fifth Avenue, Pittsburgh, PA 15261, United States; Department of Behavioral and Community Health Sciences, Graduate School of Public Health, University of Pittsburgh, Pittsburgh, PA, United States.
Abstract
Rationing of scarce vaccine supplies will likely be required when the next pandemic occurs, raising the questions about how to ration and upon what principles. Because influenza pandemics have differing mortality patterns, such as the 1918 pandemic's "W" shaped curve that effected healthy young adults, the particular pattern should inform rationing.
<DD class=abstract>
Competing ethical principles for vaccine rationing are utilitarianism and egalitarianism. Vaccine manufacturers and essential healthcare workers can be justified with either principle.
<DD class=abstract>Utilitarian principles of choosing based on social worth or those in whom vaccination is most likely to medically succeed raise substantial justice issues.
<DD class=abstract>Egalitarian principles of medical neediness and random chance avoid justice concerns and are proposed. A framework that uses multiple principles to address influenza vaccine rationing in light of a shortage is recommended.
PMID: 17258359 [PubMed - as supplied by publisher]
This article is not Open Access
</DD>
Rationing of influenza vaccine during a pandemic: Ethical analyses.
Zimmerman RK.
<DD class=abstract id=abstract17258359>Department of Family Medicine and Clinical Epidemiology, University of Pittsburgh School of Medicine, 35l8 Fifth Avenue, Pittsburgh, PA 15261, United States; Department of Behavioral and Community Health Sciences, Graduate School of Public Health, University of Pittsburgh, Pittsburgh, PA, United States.
Abstract
Rationing of scarce vaccine supplies will likely be required when the next pandemic occurs, raising the questions about how to ration and upon what principles. Because influenza pandemics have differing mortality patterns, such as the 1918 pandemic's "W" shaped curve that effected healthy young adults, the particular pattern should inform rationing.
<DD class=abstract>
Competing ethical principles for vaccine rationing are utilitarianism and egalitarianism. Vaccine manufacturers and essential healthcare workers can be justified with either principle.
<DD class=abstract>Utilitarian principles of choosing based on social worth or those in whom vaccination is most likely to medically succeed raise substantial justice issues.
<DD class=abstract>Egalitarian principles of medical neediness and random chance avoid justice concerns and are proposed. A framework that uses multiple principles to address influenza vaccine rationing in light of a shortage is recommended.
PMID: 17258359 [PubMed - as supplied by publisher]
This article is not Open Access

</DD>