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SOUTH AFRICA: Prison-like hospitals for drug-resistant TB patients![]() Thursday, March 27, 2008 Another hospital breakout in South Africa by drug-resistant tuberculosis (TB) patients desperate to spend the holidays with their families has some public health experts questioning whether forced isolation is either the most effective or humane way to treat such patients. "We make assumptions on the basis of what we think is best for patients, but if you’re talking about issues around compliance, you need to have a patient who trusts what you’re doing for them and you need to make the environment conducive to them taking the medication." Source: PlusNews CommentsS. Touray - Africa, World Tuesday, June 03, 2008 12:03 PM Whether or not it is eithical to 'isolate' patients who are deemed highly infectious and who pose a risk to the general population is a very controversial issue. I contend that since the XDR and MDR TB cases that the health officals are battling with is very diffult to treat, it can be argued that the interest of the general populations supercedes the individual's personal rights to certain liberties. This is consistent with the priciple if utlitarianism; which states that 'the greatest happiness of the greatest number should be the criterion of the virtue of action'.
What the authorities should do is to try as much as possible to treat the admitted patients humanely and to provide a stimulating environment for them so that the conditions are not as 'depressing' as it is alleged to be.
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