Nursing Home and Vaccination Consent: The Italian Perspective
Abstract
:1. Introduction
2. The State of the Art on Europe
- –
- those aged 80 and up;
- –
- those who live or work in nursing homes;
- –
- healthcare and social workers at high risk;
- –
- and, for Scotland, it dictated vaccination for “residents in a nursing home for the elderly and their carers”.
- (1)
- Residents of nursing home structures and residents in long-term care facilities (EHPAD, USLD, etc.);
- (2)
- Professionals who work in institutions for the elderly (mainly EHPAD and USLD), also at greater risk of severe forms of infectious disease or death (those over 65 and/or with comorbidities).
3. The Problem of Informed Consent
- Mentally competent residents who provide consent;
- Mentally competent residents who refuse consent;
- Mentally incompetent residents whose Court of Protection-appointed deputy (in Italy there are two kinds of deputies, a “tutore” or an “amministratore di sostegno,” the latter if specifically designated for health issues in the decree of appointment of deeds) provides consent;
- Mentally incompetent residents whose Court of Protection-appointed deputy (in Italy there are two kinds of deputies, a “tutore” or an “amministratore di sostegno,” the latter if specifically designated for health issues in the decree of appointment of deeds) refuses consent;
- Subjects whose capacity to provide consent must be ascertained;
- Subjects who are obviously mentally incompetent, for whom a legal order has not yet been made to remove their legal authority to make healthcare decisions for themselves;
- (1)
- Mentally competent residents who provide consent vaccination;
- (2)
- Mentally competent residents who refuse consent: transfer to an “anti-vax” section of the same nursing home, or to a dedicated structure for subjects who refuse vaccination, where their contact with people outside the structure will be restricted;
- (3)
- Mentally incompetent residents whose Court of Protection-appointed guardian provides consent: vaccination.
- (4)
- Mentally incompetent residents whose Court of Protection-appointed guardian refuses consent: those who have the right can decide whether to appeal to the Court of Protection for its intervention;
- (5)
- Subjects whose capacity to provide consent must be ascertained: evaluate the residual capacities of the subject in terms of decision-making, seeking to reach a favorable, shared decision involving family members;
- (6)
- Subjects who are obviously mentally incapable, for whom a legal order has not yet been made to remove their legal authority to make healthcare decisions for themselves: following the legislation of the individual nations, taking into consideration any comorbidities, proceed with vaccination;
4. Vaccination of Nursing Home Workers
5. The Role of Compulsory Vaccination
6. Recent Case Law and New Legislation
7. Conclusions
Author Contributions
Funding
Institutional Review Board Statement
Informed Consent Statement
Data Availability Statement
Conflicts of Interest
References
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Cannovo, N.; Scendoni, R.; Fede, M.M.; Siotto, F.; Fedeli, P.; Cingolani, M. Nursing Home and Vaccination Consent: The Italian Perspective. Vaccines 2021, 9, 429. https://doi.org/10.3390/vaccines9050429
Cannovo N, Scendoni R, Fede MM, Siotto F, Fedeli P, Cingolani M. Nursing Home and Vaccination Consent: The Italian Perspective. Vaccines. 2021; 9(5):429. https://doi.org/10.3390/vaccines9050429
Chicago/Turabian StyleCannovo, Nunzia, Roberto Scendoni, Marzia Maria Fede, Federico Siotto, Piergiorgio Fedeli, and Mariano Cingolani. 2021. "Nursing Home and Vaccination Consent: The Italian Perspective" Vaccines 9, no. 5: 429. https://doi.org/10.3390/vaccines9050429
APA StyleCannovo, N., Scendoni, R., Fede, M. M., Siotto, F., Fedeli, P., & Cingolani, M. (2021). Nursing Home and Vaccination Consent: The Italian Perspective. Vaccines, 9(5), 429. https://doi.org/10.3390/vaccines9050429