Skip to content
Pride Month: Advancing Belonging Through Visibility, Scholarship, and Community
Apply
Stories

With COVID-19 infections surging, can doctors refuse treatment to unvaccinated patients?

(Photo by Tomas Cuesta/Getty Images)

As more and more health care systems across parts of the U.S. push up against一or beyond一their capacity amid widely circulating COVID-19 infections, questions about how hospitals can continue to care for patients have taken dire form.  Hospitals are now filled to the brim with unvaccinated patients. Concerns over how best to ration care for scores of sick have prompted conversations about how to prioritize available beds and resources, should things get even worse, and how to continue persuading the pool of unvaccinated to get jabbed amid a widening emotional toll on hospital workers. 

And as more health care workers share their testimony from the bedsides of the sick, growing frustration over the sheer number of unvaccinated patients taking up beds has some wondering: Can doctors refuse to treat, or decline to see, patients who are unvaccinated? In the case of COVID-19 patients in need of critical care, not only would refusing to administer treatment be highly unethical, it would violate a physician’s duty of care, which can carry legal implications, say several Northeastern experts.

Continue reading at News@Northeastern.

More Stories

UNITED STATES - MAY 28: Treasury Secretary Scott Bessent holds a printout of a proposed $250 bill featuring a picture of President Donald Trump, during the White House press briefing where he addressed Trump Accounts, the war in Iran, and inflation among other issues, on Thursday, May 28, 2026. (Tom Williams/CQ Roll Call via AP Images)

Why Trump’s proposed $250 bill could set a new precedent

06.01.2026
05/28/26 - BOSTON, MA. - Chat GPT stock illustration on Thursday, May 28, 2026. Photo by Alyssa Stone/Northeastern University

Book publishing’s AI panic is here. And nobody knows what to do about it

05.29.2026
Gun and ammo magazine in the safe, front view, close up photo

Nearly 7 million kids live in a home where guns aren’t securely stored, study finds

06.03.26
Northeastern Global News