Mulla Ali, Bigham Blair L, Frolic Andrea, Christian Michael D
Emergency Medicine Physician, Trillium Health Partners, Mississauga, Ontario; Department of Medicine, University of Toronto, Toronto, Ontario, Canada.
Emergency Medicine Physician, Critical Care Fellow, Stanford University, Stanford, California; Stanford University Medical Centre, Palo Alto, California.
J Emerg Manag. 2020;18(7):31-35. doi: 10.5055/jem.2020.0484.
Local and regional policies to guide the allocation of scarce critical care resources have been developed, but the views of prospective users are not understood. We sought to investigate the perspectives of Canadian acute care physicians toward triaging scarce critical care resources in the COVID-19 pandemic.
We rapidly deployed a brief survey to Canadian emergency and critical care physicians in April 2020 to investigate current attitudes toward triaging scarce critical care resources and identify subsequent areas for improvement. Descriptive and between-group analyses along with thematic coding were used.
The survey was completed by 261 acute care physicians. Feelings of anxiety related to the pandemic were common (65 percent), as well as fears of psychological distress if required to triage scarce resources (77 percent). Only 49 percent of respondents felt confident in making resource allocation decisions. Both critical care and emergency physicians favored multidisciplinary teams over single physicians to allocate scarce critical care resources. Critical care physicians were supportive of decision making by teams not involved in patient care (3.4/5 versus 2.9/5 p = 0.04), whereas emergency physicians preferred to maintain their involvement in such decisions (3.4/5 versus 4.0/5 p = 0.007). Free text responses identified five themes for subsequent action including the need for further guidance on existing triage policies, ethical support in decision making, medicolegal protection, additional tools for therapeutic communications, and healthcare provider psychological support.
There is an urgent need for collaboration between policymakers and frontline physicians to develop critical care resource triage policies that wholly consider the diversity of provider perspectives across practice environments.
指导稀缺重症监护资源分配的地方和区域政策已经制定,但潜在使用者的观点尚不明确。我们试图调查加拿大急症科医生在新冠疫情期间对稀缺重症监护资源进行分诊的看法。
2020年4月,我们迅速向加拿大急诊和重症监护医生开展了一项简短调查,以了解他们目前对稀缺重症监护资源分诊的态度,并确定后续需要改进的方面。采用了描述性分析、组间分析以及主题编码。
261名急症科医生完成了调查。与疫情相关的焦虑情绪很常见(65%),如果被要求对稀缺资源进行分诊,也有对心理困扰的担忧(77%)。只有49%的受访者对做出资源分配决策有信心。重症监护医生和急诊医生都更倾向于多学科团队而非单名医生来分配稀缺的重症监护资源。重症监护医生支持由不参与患者护理的团队进行决策(3.4/5对2.9/5,p = 0.04),而急诊医生更希望继续参与此类决策(3.4/5对4.0/5,p = 0.007)。自由文本回复确定了五个后续行动主题,包括需要对现有分诊政策提供进一步指导、决策中的伦理支持、法医学保护、治疗性沟通的额外工具以及医护人员心理支持。
政策制定者和一线医生迫切需要合作,制定全面考虑不同执业环境中提供者观点多样性的重症监护资源分诊政策。