City University of New York (CUNY) Hunter College, New York, NY, USA.
Ethics Committee Memorial Sloan Kettering Cancer Center, New York, NY, USA.
Int J Equity Health. 2022 May 24;21(1):76. doi: 10.1186/s12939-022-01629-0.
The COVID-19 pandemic has strained healthcare systems by creating a tragic imbalance between needs and resources. Governments and healthcare organizations have adapted to this pronounced scarcity by applying allocation guidelines to facilitate life-or-death decision-making, reduce bias, and save as many lives as possible. However, we argue that in societies beset by longstanding inequities, these approaches fall short as mortality patterns for historically discriminated against communities have been disturbingly higher than in the general population.
We review attack and fatality rates; survey allocation protocols designed to deal with the extreme scarcity characteristic of the earliest phases of the pandemic; and highlight the larger ethical perspectives (Utilitarianism, non-Utilitarian Rawlsian justice) that might justify such allocation practices.
The COVID-19 pandemic has dramatically amplified the dire effects of disparities with respect to the social determinants of health. Patients in historically marginalized groups not only have significantly poorer health prospects but also lower prospects of accessing high quality medical care and benefitting from it even when available. Thus, mortality among minority groups has ranged from 1.9 to 2.4 times greater than the rest of the population. Standard allocation schemas, that prioritize those most likely to benefit, perpetuate and may even exacerbate preexisting systemic injustices.
To be better prepared for the inevitable next pandemic, we must urgently begin the monumental project of addressing and reforming the structural inequities in US society that account for the strikingly disparate mortality rates we have witnessed over the course of the current pandemic.
COVID-19 大流行通过在需求和资源之间造成悲惨的失衡,使医疗保健系统承受压力。政府和医疗机构通过应用分配准则来适应这种明显的稀缺性,以促进生死攸关的决策、减少偏见并尽可能挽救更多生命。然而,我们认为,在长期存在不平等的社会中,这些方法存在不足,因为历史上受到歧视的社区的死亡率模式明显高于一般人群。
我们审查了攻击率和死亡率;调查了旨在应对大流行早期阶段极端稀缺性的分配协议;并强调了更大的伦理视角(功利主义、非功利罗尔斯正义),这些视角可能证明这种分配做法是合理的。
COVID-19 大流行极大地放大了与健康社会决定因素相关的差距的可怕影响。历史上处于边缘地位的群体中的患者不仅健康前景明显较差,而且即使有高质量的医疗保健,他们获得并从中受益的机会也较低。因此,少数民族群体的死亡率比其余人群高 1.9 到 2.4 倍。优先考虑最有可能受益的人的标准分配方案延续了甚至可能加剧美国社会中已经存在的系统性不公正现象。
为了更好地为下一次不可避免的大流行做好准备,我们必须紧急开始解决和改革美国社会中的结构性不平等问题,这些不平等现象是我们在当前大流行期间目睹的明显差异死亡率的原因。