The Ethical Dilemmas in the Face of Resource Limitations for Children Needing Surgery
Abstract
Children living in remote and Indigenous communities in Canada often face significant barriers to timely surgical care due to geographic isolation, limited local resources, and financial pressures within a publicly funded healthcare system. These challenges frequently create ethical dilemmas for clinicians and families, who must choose between delaying care for transfer to a tertiary center or proceeding locally with limited expertise. This paper explores three illustrative cases including emergent neonatal volvulus with no possibility of transfer, pyloric stenosis with family-declined transfer, and elective hernia repair with family-requested transfer.
Keywords
Pediatric SurgeryHealthcare EquityRural MedicineIndigenous HealthSurgical EthicsResource AllocationAccess To CareHashtags
#PediatricSurgery#HealthcareEquity#RuralHealth#SurgicalEthicsThis article is published on an external journal. Click below to read the full text.
Read full article ↗How to cite: GlobalCastMD. The Ethical Dilemmas in the Face of Resource Limitations for Children Needing Surgery. GlobalCastMD Medical Library. 2026-03-11. https://origin-library.globalcastmd.com/article/11660
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