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Airlines Should Require COVID-19 Vaccination to Fly

Silhouettes of people in an airport terminal with luggage.

Silhouettes of people in an airport terminal with luggage.

Charles E. Binkley, MD and David S. Kemp, JD

Rick Bowmer/AP Photo

Charles E. Binkley, MD () is the director of bioethics at the Markkula Center for Applied Ethics at 糖心破解版, and () is a professor of legal writing at U.C. Berkeley School of Law. Views are their own.

The COVID-19 pandemic has taken a . Airline companies have had to resort to in their efforts to avoid bankruptcy. Once the U.S. Food and Drug Administration (FDA) has granted a full Biologics License Approval to one or more vaccines and everyone has had a reasonable opportunity to obtain the vaccine, airlines should implement policies requiring passenger vaccination. A vaccination requirement to fly is the most medically and ethically sound way for airlines to protect employees and passengers, earn public trust, and facilitate the industry鈥檚 financial recovery. 

Airlines have both a legal and an ethical obligation to ensure the safety of their crew and passengers. This obligation is rightfully prioritized above all else, given our society鈥檚 dependence on these 鈥渃ommon carriers.鈥 It explains why flights are cancelled or delayed for bad weather. It explains why aircraft are taken out of service upon detection of a mechanical problem. Today, the source of one of the greatest risks of harm to travelers is SARS-CoV-2. Currently accepted of contracting COVID-19 are simply not possible on airplanes.

Airlines also have a duty to protect their employees. Flight attendants often have to interact with patients in a manner that doesn鈥檛 allow for appropriate distancing. Flight attendants have admirably stepped up to act as to ensure the safety of passengers and crew, but this is a substantial burden that is likely not sustainable in the long term. As well, flight attendants are commonly called on to assist acutely ill passengers. Mandating a COVID-19 vaccination would protect the flight attendant, the ill patient, and any other passengers that volunteered to assist with an in-flight emergency.

Airlines have tried to assuage the public鈥檚 fears about contracting COVID-19 by touting the efficiency of their , and . However, the while flying is likely to continue to dissuade passengers. Mandating that passengers prove COVID-19 vaccination is the most medically sound and efficient way for airlines to recover economically. In fact, its intention to require that international passengers be vaccinated. 

Some would-be passengers are certain to object to a vaccine requirement, citing their right to decide whether to get the vaccine. Patients reasonably expect that health care providers will respect their individual autonomy, but airlines have no such obligation. In fact, passengers already relinquish some autonomy to board and remain on a flight: they can鈥檛 smoke on board, and they can鈥檛 go to the bathroom during certain parts of the flight鈥攋ust to name a few. Passengers forfeit these individual freedoms for their own safety, as well as that of the airline employees and other passengers. If a person exercises their right not to get the vaccine, airlines can and should exclude them from service. No ethical harm is done by denying a potential passenger service out of a duty to protect the safety of other passengers and the flight crew. 

Some passengers may have . Indeed, there are legitimate medical exemptions, such as a history of severe allergic reaction to vaccines or other rare medication reactions. Pregnant passengers may be able to claim an exemption based on the limited data available in this population.

Potential passengers may seek a conscience-based exemption since all the currently approved from aborted fetuses. However, in the , one of the most strident institutions to oppose abortion, the vaccines are still morally permissible. In fact, many Christian religious leaders argue that receiving the vaccine to prevent infecting other people is a

Before mandates are enacted, the airlines would have to figure out the logistics of verifying vaccination status, but doing so seems eminently feasible. They would also need to take steps to ensure that the policy does not disproportionately burden passengers from areas that may not yet have the same full access to the vaccine as other areas. If enacted justly and transparently, mandating COVID-19 vaccines for airline passengers and employees is economically, medically, and ethically the right thing to do.

 

May 3, 2021
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