PellegrinoED. Toward a reconstruction of medical morality. Am J Bioeth2006; 6: 65–71.
2.
ChimaSC. Global medicine: is it ethical or morally justifiable for doctors and other healthcare workers to go on strike?BMC Med Ethics2013; 14: S5.
3.
CruessRLCruessSR. Expectations and obligations: professionalism and medicine’s social contract with society. Perspect Biol Med2008; 51(4): 579–598.
4.
ColemanCH. Beyond the call of duty: compelling health care professionals to work during an influenza pandemic. Iowa Law Rev2008; 94: 1–47.
5.
OrentlicherD. The physician’s duty to treat during pandemics. Am J Public Health2018; 108(11): 1459–1461.
6.
GanzFDMargalithIBenbenishtyJ, et al.A conflict of values: nurses’ willingness to work under threatening conditions. J Nurs Scholarsh2019; 51(3): 281–288.
7.
ChimaSC. Doctor and healthcare workers strike. Curr Opin Anaesthesiol2020; 33(2): 203–210.
8.
MateusALPOteteHEBeckCR, et al.Effectiveness of travel restrictions in the rapid containment of human influenza: a systematic review. Bull World Health Organ2014; 92(12): 868–880D.
9.
HoppeT. ‘Spanish flu’: when infectious disease names blur origins and stigmatize those infected. Am J Public Health2018; 108: 1462–1464.
10.
World Health Organization (WHO). WHO best practices for naming of new human infectious diseases. Geneva: WHO, 2015.