Learn Before
Multiple Choice

A doctor working in a remote, under-resourced clinic has a limited supply of a life-saving vaccine during a deadly epidemic. According to official guidelines, the vaccine must be given to frontline workers first. However, a child in the village is critically ill and will die without the vaccine, while the available frontline workers are all currently healthy and at low immediate risk. The doctor chooses to give the last dose to the sick child, violating the official guidelines. Which of the following justifications for the doctor's action best demonstrates a moral reasoning guided by broad, self-chosen ethical principles?

0

1

Updated 2025-10-10

Contributors are:

Who are from:

Tags

Clinical Practice of Psychology

Psychology

Social Science

Empirical Science

Science

Ch.9 Lifespan Development - Psychology @ OpenStax

OpenStax

Psychology @ OpenStax

Introduction to Psychology @ OpenStax Course

OpenStax Psychology (2nd ed.) Textbook

Analysis in Bloom's Taxonomy

Cognitive Psychology