Foglia Mary Beth, Pearlman Robert A, Bottrell Melissa M, Altemose Jane A, Fox Ellen
National Center for Ethics in Health Care (VHA), Department of Veterans Affairs, Seattle, USA.
Organ Ethic. 2008 Fall-Winter;4(2):83-96.
Setting priorities and the subsequent allocation of resources is a major ethical issue facing healthcare facilities, including the Veterans Health Administration (VHA), the largest integrated healthcare delivery network in the United States. Yet despite the importance of priority setting and its impact on those who receive and those who provide care, we know relatively little about how clinicians and managers view allocation processes within their facilities.
The purpose of this secondary analysis of survey data was to characterize staff members' perceptions regarding the fairness of healthcare ethics practices related to resource allocation in Veterans Administration (VA) facilities. The specific aim of the study was to compare the responses of clinicians, clinician managers, and non-clinician managers with respect to these survey items.
We utilized a paper and web-based survey and a cross-sectional design of VHA clinicians and managers. Our sample consisted of a purposive stratified sample of 109 managers and a stratified random sample of 269 clinicians employed 20 or more hours per week in one of four VA medical centers. The four medical centers were participating as field sites selected to test the logistics of administering and reporting results of the Integrated Ethics Staff Survey, an assessment tool aimed at characterizing a broad range of ethical practices within a healthcare organization.
In general, clinicians were more critical than clinician managers or non-clinician managers of the institutions' allocation processes and of the impact of resource decisions on patient care. Clinicians commonly reported that they did not (a) understand their facility's decision-making processes, (b) receive explanations from management regarding the reasons behind important allocation decisions, or (b) perceive that they were influential in allocation decisions. In addition, clinicians and managers both perceived that education related to the ethics of resource allocation was insufficient and that their facilities could increase their effectiveness in identifying and resolving ethical problems related to resource allocation.
How well a healthcare facility ensures fairness in the way it allocates its resources across programs and services depends on multiple factors, including awareness by decision makers that setting priorities and allocating resources is a moral enterprise (moral awareness), the availability of a consistent process that includes important stakeholder groups (procedural justice), and concurrence by stakeholders that decisions represent outcomes that fairly balance competing interests and have a positive net effect on the quality of care (distributive justice). In this study, clinicians and managers alike identified the need for improvement in healthcare ethics practices related to resource allocation.
确定优先事项以及随后的资源分配是包括退伍军人健康管理局(VHA)在内的医疗机构面临的一个主要伦理问题,VHA是美国最大的综合医疗服务网络。然而,尽管确定优先事项很重要,且其对接受治疗者和提供治疗者都有影响,但我们对临床医生和管理人员如何看待其所在机构内的分配过程了解相对较少。
对调查数据进行二次分析的目的是描述工作人员对退伍军人管理局(VA)设施中与资源分配相关的医疗伦理实践公平性的看法。该研究的具体目标是比较临床医生、临床管理人员和非临床管理人员对这些调查项目的回答。
我们采用了纸质和基于网络的调查以及对VHA临床医生和管理人员的横断面设计。我们的样本包括一个有目的分层抽样的109名管理人员和一个分层随机抽样的269名临床医生,他们每周在四个VA医疗中心之一工作20小时或更多。这四个医疗中心作为实地站点参与,被选中测试综合伦理工作人员调查的管理和报告结果的后勤工作,该评估工具旨在描述医疗机构内广泛的伦理实践。
总体而言,临床医生比临床管理人员或非临床管理人员对机构的分配过程以及资源决策对患者护理的影响更为挑剔。临床医生普遍报告称,他们(a)不理解所在机构的决策过程,(b)没有从管理层得到关于重要分配决策背后原因的解释,或者(b)感觉自己在分配决策中没有影响力。此外,临床医生和管理人员都认为与资源分配伦理相关的教育不足,且他们所在的机构可以提高识别和解决与资源分配相关伦理问题的有效性。
医疗机构在跨项目和服务分配资源时确保公平的程度取决于多个因素,包括决策者意识到确定优先事项和分配资源是一项道德事业(道德意识)、存在一个包括重要利益相关者群体的一致过程(程序正义),以及利益相关者一致认为决策代表了公平平衡相互竞争利益并对护理质量有积极净影响的结果(分配正义)。在本研究中,临床医生和管理人员都指出需要改进与资源分配相关的医疗伦理实践。