Social Science Research Institute, Duke University, Durham, USA.
Department of Computer Science, Duke University, Durham, USA.
BMC Med Ethics. 2022 Mar 25;23(1):33. doi: 10.1186/s12910-022-00773-0.
In the early stages of the COVID-19 pandemic, many health systems, including those in the UK, developed triage guidelines to manage severe shortages of ventilators. At present, there is an insufficient understanding of how the public views these guidelines, and little evidence on which features of a patient the public believe should and should not be considered in ventilator triage.
Two surveys were conducted with representative UK samples. In the first survey, 525 participants were asked in an open-ended format to provide features they thought should and should not be considered in allocating ventilators for COVID-19 patients when not enough ventilators are available. In the second survey, 505 participants were presented with 30 features identified from the first study, and were asked if these features should count in favour of a patient with the feature getting a ventilator, count against the patient, or neither. Statistical tests were conducted to determine if a feature was generally considered by participants as morally relevant and whether its mean was non-neutral.
In Survey 1, the features of a patient most frequently cited as being morally relevant to determining who would receive access to ventilators were age, general health, prospect of recovery, having dependents, and the severity of COVID symptoms. The features most frequently cited as being morally irrelevant to determining who would receive access to ventilators are race, gender, economic status, religion, social status, age, sexual orientation, and career. In Survey 2, the top three features that participants thought should count in favour of receiving a ventilator were pregnancy, having a chance of dying soon, and having waited for a long time. The top three features that participants thought should count against a patient receiving a ventilator were having committed violent crimes in the past, having unnecessarily engaged in activities with a high risk of COVID-19 infection, and a low chance of survival.
The public generally agreed with existing UK guidelines that allocate ventilators according to medical benefits and that aim to avoid discrimination based on demographic features such as race and gender. However, many participants expressed potentially non-utilitarian concerns, such as inclining to deprioritise ventilator allocation to those who had a criminal history or who contracted the virus by needlessly engaging in high-risk activities.
在 COVID-19 大流行的早期阶段,包括英国在内的许多卫生系统制定了分诊指南,以应对呼吸机严重短缺的问题。目前,人们对公众对这些指南的看法了解甚少,也几乎没有证据表明公众认为哪些患者特征应该在呼吸机分诊中考虑,哪些不应该考虑。
我们对具有代表性的英国样本进行了两项调查。在第一项调查中,以开放式格式向 525 名参与者询问,当呼吸机不足时,他们认为在为 COVID-19 患者分配呼吸机时应该考虑和不应该考虑哪些特征。在第二项调查中,向 505 名参与者展示了从第一项研究中确定的 30 个特征,并询问这些特征是否应该有利于有特征的患者获得呼吸机,是否不利于患者,或者两者都不是。进行了统计检验,以确定一个特征是否被参与者普遍认为与道德相关,以及其平均值是否非中立。
在调查 1 中,作为确定谁将获得呼吸机接入资格的道德相关特征,患者的年龄、一般健康状况、康复前景、是否有家属、COVID 症状的严重程度被认为是最相关的。被认为与确定谁将获得呼吸机接入资格无关的特征是种族、性别、经济地位、宗教、社会地位、年龄、性取向和职业。在调查 2 中,参与者认为应该有利于获得呼吸机的前三个特征是怀孕、即将死亡的可能性高、以及已经等待了很长时间。参与者认为应该不利于患者获得呼吸机的前三个特征是过去有过暴力犯罪、不必要地从事有高 COVID-19 感染风险的活动、以及生存机会低。
公众普遍同意英国现有的根据医疗效益分配呼吸机的指南,这些指南旨在避免基于种族和性别等人口特征的歧视。然而,许多参与者表达了潜在的非功利主义的担忧,例如倾向于优先考虑那些有犯罪记录或因不必要地从事高风险活动而感染病毒的人。