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Denied Dignity: The Ethical Crisis of Healthcare Inequity for Toronto's Homeless
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Denied Dignity: The Ethical Crisis of Healthcare Inequity for Toronto's Homeless
Reducing homelessness and improving health outcomes for this vulnerable population are
pressing issues facing Toronto and require urgent action grounded in ethical principles of justice
and utilitarianism. Recent local news articles highlight alarming cases where homeless
individuals have been denied basic healthcare, leading to needless suffering or death, which
starkly reveals the inequities around access to care. Analyzing these cases through ethical
frameworks clarifies healthcare providers' moral obligations and how nurses can advocate for
change. Upholding ethics is imperative to reform unjust practices and fulfill our shared
responsibility to care for community members.
An article from July 2022 covers the tragic story of a homeless man who passed away in
a shelter after being turned away from two emergency rooms in Toronto while experiencing
heart failure symptoms (McQuigge, 2022). The hospitals told him to return when his condition
worsened, but he died hours after finally returning to the shelter. This case contradicts
fundamental principles of justice and fairness.
The social justice theory focuses on reducing inequalities, protecting human rights, and
ensuring the fair distribution of resources and treatment in society (Beauchamp & Childress,
2019). Healthcare is viewed as a basic right that should be accessible to all. When vulnerable
groups like people without homes face systemic barriers to accessing services, it violates
equitable treatment under social justice (Beauchamp & Childress, 2019). Turning away sick
individuals seeking care at hospitals is unethical discrimination that can cost lives. Healthcare
providers have to ensure fair access.
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Utilitarianism is another relevant ethical framework, which holds that decisions should
maximize benefits and minimize harm for masses (Driver, 2009). Allowing homeless patients to
suffer without treatment fails under this view, as it produces immense and unnecessary pain and
detriment. Caring for patients, on the other hand, promotes well-being for both individuals and
the broader community. Especially when patients are vulnerable, healthcare workers must
provide compassionate care to align with utilitarian ethics.
These frameworks elucidate hospitals' ethical obligations to serve all patients in need,
regardless of social or economic status. As the news article emphasizes, "Hospitals are still
denying treatment for the most vulnerable in our society and letting them die needless deaths"
(McQuigge, 2022). This status quo violates principles of justice and utility and must be
reformed.
Nurses are important in upholding ethics and promoting change within healthcare
systems. As patient advocates, nurses can apply ethical theories to analyze unjust policies and
develop solutions. For example, nurses can advocate for improved discharge planning to link
homeless patients to community resources (Buetow & Adair, 2013). They can also provide
education to reduce other providers' stigmatization of homeless patients (Zrinyi & Balogh,
2004). On an individual level, nurses have an ethical responsibility to ensure all patients receive
quality care, showing compassion rather than judgment. They can model person-centered care
that treats people without housing with dignity.
Nurses across Toronto are already working to fulfill these roles. One local nurse
interviewed emphasizes that "there is still issues around stigma and bias impacting healthcare for
the homeless" and calls for "systemic change" (McQuigge, 2022). She highlights the need for
policies requiring discharge plans for homeless patients to coordinate follow-up care (McQuigge,
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2022). Implementing such plans aligns with social justice principles around equitable access. It
also serves the utilitarian purpose of supporting this population's health. Through such advocacy
efforts, nurses uphold their professional duty to protect patients' well-being.
Other Toronto programs also showcase nursing's role in addressing healthcare inequities
for people without homes. Inner City Health Associates operates mobile clinics that bring
healthcare directly to shelters and drop-in centers (Inner et al., 2017). This improves access and
reduces barriers to care. Nurses provide frontline services at these clinics, guided by a mission to
serve vulnerable communities. They put ethical principles into practice through their work.
While laws prohibit discrimination in healthcare, the reality still falls short for homeless
populations who face stigma and inadequate policies. Analyzing such injustice using ethical
lenses highlights the need for reform. As nurses promote equity and help transform practices to
serve all people with dignity, they actualize core values. Nurses uphold critical ethical
obligations to people without homes through advocacy, education, policy improvements, and
high-quality care for each patient.
The pandemic of homelessness and barriers to healthcare in Toronto require immediate
and meaningful action guided by ethics. These values align with the nursing profession's
fundamental duties to promote justice and maximize well-being. Nurses can lead change and
model what equitable, compassionate care looks like on a systemic and individual level. As local
health inequities persist, drawing on frameworks of social justice and utilitarianism should
motivate and direct nursing efforts to address determinants of health. Although affecting change
is challenging, nurses must hold fast to their ethical convictions in caring for people without
homes and fulfilling their role as patient advocates.
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References
Beauchamp, T. L., & Childress, J. F. (2019). Principles of biomedical ethics (8th ed.). Oxford
University Press.
Buetow, S., & Adair, V. (2013). Reconciling the irreconcilable: Providing integrated primary
healthcare to homeless people. Health and Social Care in the Community, 21(5), 492500. https://doi.org/10.1111/hsc.12042
Driver, J. (2009). The history of utilitarianism. In E. N. Zalta (Ed.), The Stanford encyclopedia
of philosophy. https://plato.stanford.edu/entries/utilitarianism-history/
Inner City Health Associates. (2017). Who we are. https://www.innercityhealth.ca/who-we-are/
McQuigge, M. (2022, July 15). Advocates renew calls for better healthcare for homeless after
man who couldn’t access care dies in Toronto shelter. Toronto Star.
https://www.thestar.com/news/canada/2022/07/15/advocates-renew-calls-for-betterhealthcare-for-homeless-after-man-who-couldnt-access-care-dies-in-toronto-shelter.html
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