Temerty Faculty of Medicine, University of Toronto, Toronto, ON, Canada.
Department of Anesthesiology and Pain Medicine, University of Toronto, Toronto, ON, Canada.
BMC Med Ethics. 2022 Feb 11;23(1):11. doi: 10.1186/s12910-022-00749-0.
The expectation of pandemic-induced severe resource shortages has prompted authorities to draft and update frameworks to guide clinical decision-making and patient triage. While these documents differ in scope, they share a utilitarian focus on the maximization of benefit. This utilitarian view necessarily marginalizes certain groups, in particular individuals with increased medical needs.
Here, we posit that engagement with the disability critique demands that we broaden our understandings of justice and fairness in clinical decision-making and patient triage. We propose the capabilities theory, which recognizes that justice requires a range of positive capabilities/freedoms conducive to the achievement of meaningful life goals, as a means to do so. Informed by a disability rights critique of the clinical response to the pandemic, we offer direction for the construction of future clinical triage protocols which will avoid ableist biases by incorporating a broader apprehension of what it means to be human.
The clinical pandemic response, codified across triage protocols, should embrace a form of justice which incorporates a vision of pluralistic human capabilities and a valuing of positive freedoms.
对大流行引起的严重资源短缺的预期促使当局起草和更新框架,以指导临床决策和患者分诊。虽然这些文件的范围不同,但它们都以效益最大化的功利主义为重点。这种功利主义观点必然会使某些群体边缘化,特别是那些医疗需求增加的人。
在这里,我们假设与残疾批判的接触要求我们扩大对临床决策和患者分诊中正义和公平的理解。我们提出能力理论,该理论认识到正义需要一系列有利于实现有意义的生活目标的积极能力/自由,作为一种手段。受大流行期间临床反应的残疾权利批判的启发,我们为构建未来的临床分诊协议提供了指导方向,这些协议将通过更广泛地理解人类的含义来避免歧视性偏见。
分诊协议中编纂的临床大流行应对措施应采用一种正义形式,其中包括多元化的人类能力愿景和对积极自由的重视。