Institutional ethics committees (IECs) now exist at many health care facilities and are in the planning stages at others. Due in part to the recent origins of IECs and the continuing debate over their optimal composition, role, and status in health care institutions, legislatures and courts have yet to recognize or clarify their legal status. Neither reported cases nor statutes clearly explain whether the proceedings and records of IECs must be disclosed to prosecuting attorneys or to parties to civil lawsuits, whether such information can be introduced as evidence in a trial, or whether persons serving on IECs or those providing information to IECs may be held civilly or criminally liable for actions by the committees.
This article sets forth some basic principles relating to the composition and functions of IECs, then examines the questions of confidentiality of IEC proceedings and immunity for persons serving on or providing information to the committees. Several reasons against and in favor of confidentiality and immunity are stated.