You are on page 1of 7

UNIVERSIDAD PRIVADA SAN JUAN BAUTISTA

FACULTAD DE CIENCIAS DE LA SALUD


ESCUELA PROFESIONAL DE MEDICINA HUMANA
“Dr. Wilfredo Erwin Gardini Tuesta”
 
ACREDITADA POR SINEACE
RE ACREDITADA INTERNACIONALMENTE POR RIEV

QUESTIONNAIRE
MEDICAL GRAND ROUNDS
PROFESSOR: CAROLINA BELMAR LOPEZ
MEMBERS:
● CHINCHAY CANCHO, TELMA
● PALOMINO MALDONADO, ANGELA VIVIANS
● ROJAS LUJAN, JORDY JESUS
● TOMAIRO HUALLANCA, FELIX DALMA
● TORRES AGUADO, DALYSKA AYLIN
GRUPO 04
CYCLE: VII
CLASSROOM: T2
ICA-PERÚ
2023
QUESTIONS

DURING THE SITUATION OF THE COVID-19 PANDEMIC, CORRUPTION WAS EVIDENCE IN

01 THE POLICY ON VACCINES, SO IN PERU WAS THERE REALLY A DISTRIBUTIVE JUSTICE IN


THE POPULATION ACCORDING TO VACCINES?

DO YOU THINK THAT THE DELAY IN THE ARRIVAL OF VACCINES TO OUR COUNTRY
02 BREAKS ONE OF THE 3 FUNDAMENTAL VALUES MENTIONED IN THE ARTICLE?

IN THE FAIR PRIORITY MODEL, DO YOU THINK THAT COUNTRIES WITH A LESSER
03 ECONOMY ARE PLACED AT A DISADVANTAGE?
Answers to the
questions of Group 3
1- Our country decided not to execute the national partiality, vaccinating more than
100,000 Venezuelan citizens until September 2021. Do you think that if the government
had assigned those doses to increase the speed of vaccination among Peruvians, the
number of deaths would have been lower?

Yes, because there would have been more immunizations in people with associated diseases
and the elderly. I would have helped them before they get involved and end their lives.

But on the other hand, from an ethical point of view, it would not have been the right thing to do,
the right of people to life-saving resources should not depend on nationality. National
governments have cross-border responsibilities to help meet critical needs like basic
healthcare, particularly in a global health emergency.
2- Would have saved lives the fact that fairly distributing a COVID-19 vaccine among
countries have happened?

Well no, firstly because countries have different population sizes and this would lead to
countries with smaller populations benefiting more from vaccines, another would be that
countries would also lie with their infection rate in order to access more vaccines, whatever A
sophisticated enough approach to meaningfully operationalize ethical values will require
approximations and judgments about the relative weight to assign different metrics, such as
SEYLL and the poverty gap. Simple metrics like population size avoid approximations and
trade-offs, but they don't measure what morally matters. In addition, the proposed metrics are
routinely used in global health, and basing vaccine delivery on these metrics will encourage
accurate data collection and reporting on COVID-19-related changes in mortality and
poverty.
3- The three dimensions of the damage of a covid 19 vaccine are important. Are the
damages reversible? How devastating are they? And can they be compensated?

Death is irreversible, devastating and unfortunately those who die due to lack of vaccines
could not be compensated.
Unfortunately those people who passed away so prematurely put on hold their dreams that
they may have for the future. Specialists affirm that anticipating premature deaths is both
prudent and ethical.
But death has not been the only irreversible and devastating damage, since covid 19 wreaked
havoc with the presence of cerebrovascular diseases and damage to vital organs, which we
will only see in the future. In addition to all this in the social sphere and economic, it was seen
that as a result of the pandemic, many people were left without work, causing poverty to
increase rapidly.

You might also like