The Journal of Healthcare, Ethics and Administration

Current Issue: Vol.12 No.1 (Winter 2026)

ISSN 2474-2309

HEALTH ORGANIZATION AND ETHICS

Address correspondence to: Peter Clark. Email: pclark@sju.edu

Pages: 1-27

Pertussis, also known as whooping cough, is an infection of the respiratory system, characterized by inflammation of the lungs and airways, and is caused by Bordetella pertussis. Studies suggest that pertussis is highly contagious, affecting around 90% of individuals exposed to the pathogen in the household and 50-80% of individuals exposed to it in schoolrooms. In 1934, the United States (U.S.) reported around 265,000 pertussis cases, which decreased to about 7,000 cases in 2023; however, the U.S. witnessed a five-fold increase in reported pertussis cases in 2024. Therefore, this paper outlines possible factors contributing to the surge in pertussis cases, lays out evidence-based effective approaches and preventive measures to curtail future pertussis and, possibly, other air-borne disease outbreaks, and provides ethical arguments for adopting the initiatives/changes recommended herein.

Address correspondence to: Monideepa B. Becerra. Email: Monideepa.Becerra@Rosalindfranklin.edu

Pages: 28-38

Introduction: Biomarkers of cellular aging (e.g., telomere length) reflect biological aging and are influenced by environmental and social factors. Veterans often face health disparities, and understanding telomere dynamics could inform personalized approaches to improve their health outcomes.

Methods: Using data from the National Health and Nutrition Examination Survey, we analyzed telomere length among 929 U.S. male veterans aged 20-84 years, examining associations with socioeconomic status, health conditions, and lifestyle factors through survey-weighted linear regression models.

Results: Veterans exhibited significantly shorter telomeres compared to civilians, with an average reduction of approximately 229.61 base pairs (bp) (p < .0001). Factors such as poverty, obesity, and COPD were independently associated with greater telomere shortening; for example, veterans living below the poverty line had about 261 bp less telomere length, and those with COPD showed a reduction of approximately 182 bp. Obese veterans had about 152 bp shorter telomeres, and the combination of poverty and obesity resulted in a cumulative shortening of approximately 424 bp, indicating a synergistic effect on cellular aging. These associations persisted after adjusting for age and other confounders, emphasizing the impact of socioeconomic and health-related factors on biological aging among veterans.

Conclusion: These findings are associated with shorter telomeres and may inform risk stratification and targeted prevention.

Address correspondence to: Angela Lindsay. Email: angela.creditt@vcuhealth.org

Pages: 39-46

Emergency department (ED) crowding and patient boarding have emerged as critical threats to patient safety, healthcare quality, and provider well-being. Crowding occurs when the demand for emergency services exceeds available resources, leading to prolonged wait times, delayed care, and treatment in non-traditional spaces. Boarding, the retention of admitted patients in the ED due to lack of inpatient capacity, is the most significant driver of ED crowding and is associated with increased morbidity, mortality, adverse events, and staff burnout. Legal implications are substantial: malpractice data reveal significant financial losses, with boarding cases twice as likely to close with indemnity payments and nearly half involving patient death. Regulatory bodies such as The Joint Commission (TJC) and the Centers for Medicare and Medicaid Services (CMS) have proposed measures to mitigate boarding, recognizing its impact on patient outcomes. Ethically, boarding undermines the principles of beneficence, nonmaleficence, autonomy, and justice by delaying treatment, eroding privacy and dignity, and exacerbating health inequities. It also contributes to moral distress and violence against healthcare workers. Addressing this crisis requires systemic, multidisciplinary reforms. Strategies include optimizing weekend discharges, harmonizing elective admissions, creating admission-hold units, expanding staffing, and implementing full capacity protocols. ED-level interventions, such as fast track models, observation units, and telemedicine, can improve throughput, while policy action is needed to mandate maximum boarding times and to restructure reimbursement models that incentivize efficiency. Ultimately, ED crowding and boarding represent an ethically unacceptable and legally dangerous consequence of systemic capacity failures. Comprehensive institutional and policy reforms are essential to safeguard patient welfare, reduce liability, and preserve the ED’s role as the healthcare safety net.