Download PDF

AJOB Empir Bioeth

Publication date: 2022-01-01
Volume: 13 Pages: 67 - 78

Author:

Johnson, SB
Lucivero, F ; Zimmermann, BM ; Stendahl, E ; Samuel, G ; Phillips, A ; Hangel, N

Keywords:

COVID-19, Ethics, SARS-COV-2, infectious disease, moral judgements, pandemics, qualitative research, Humans, Morals, Pandemics, Qualitative Research, SARS-CoV-2, 1608 Sociology, 2201 Applied Ethics, 5001 Applied ethics

Abstract:

Introduction: There has been no work that identifies the hidden or implicit normative assumptions on which participants base their views during the COVID-19 pandemic, and their reasoning and how they reach moral or ethical judgements. Our analysis focused on participants' moral values, ethical reasoning and normative positions around the transmission of SARS-CoV-2.Methods: We analyzed data from 177 semi-structured interviews across five European countries (Germany, Ireland, Italy, Switzerland and the United Kingdom) conducted in April 2020.Results: Findings are structured in four themes: ethical contention in the context of normative uncertainty; patterns of ethical deliberation when contemplating restrictions and measures to reduce viral transmission; moral judgements regarding "good" and "bad" people; using existing structures of meaning for moral reasoning and ethical judgement.Discussion: Moral tools are an integral part of people's reaction to and experience of a pandemic. 'Moral preparedness' for the next phases of this pandemic and for future pandemics will require an understanding of the moral values and normative concepts citizens use in their own decision-making. Three important elements of this preparedness are: conceptual clarity over what responsibility or respect mean in practice; better understanding of collective mindsets and how to encourage them; and a situated, rather than universalist, approach to the development of normative standards.