Division of Nephrology, Department of Medicine, University of Washington, Seattle, Washington, USA
Hospital and Speciality Medicine, VA Puget Sound Health Care System Seattle Division, Seattle, Washington, USA.
J Med Ethics. 2024 Aug 21;50(9):647-649. doi: 10.1136/jme-2022-108262.
Severe staffing shortages have emerged as a prominent threat to maintaining usual standards of care during the COVID-2019 pandemic. In dire settings of crisis capacity, healthcare systems assume the ethical duty to maximise aggregate population-level benefit of existing resources. To this end, existing plans for rationing mechanical ventilators and intensive care unit beds in crisis capacity focus on selecting individual patients who are most likely to survive and prioritising these patients to receive scarce resources. However, staffing capacity is conceptually different from availability of these types of discrete resources, and the existing strategy of identifying and prioritising patients with the best prognosis cannot be readily adapted to fit this real-world scenario. We propose that two alternative approaches to staffing resource allocation offer a better conceptual fit: (1) : restrict access to acute care services and hospital admission for patients at relatively low clinical risk and (2) : universally restrict selected interventions and treatments that require substantial staff time and/or energy but offer minimal near-term patient benefit. These strategies-while potentially resulting in care that deviates from usual standards-support the goal of maximising the aggregate benefit of scarce resources in crisis capacity settings triggered by staffing shortages. This ethical framework offers a foundation to support institutional leaders in developing operationalisable crisis capacity policies that promote fairness and support healthcare workers.
在 COVID-19 大流行期间,严重的人员短缺已成为维持常规护理标准的突出威胁。在危机能力的严峻环境下,医疗保健系统承担着最大限度地提高现有资源的总体人群效益的道德责任。为此,危机能力中机械呼吸机和重症监护病房床位配给的现有计划侧重于选择最有可能存活的个体患者,并优先为这些患者提供稀缺资源。然而,人员配备能力与这些离散资源的可用性在概念上有所不同,并且确定和优先考虑预后最佳的患者的现有策略不能轻易适应这种现实情况。我们提出,人员配备资源分配的两种替代方法提供了更好的概念契合度:(1) 限制相对低临床风险的患者获得急性护理服务和住院治疗的机会,以及 (2) 普遍限制需要大量人力和/或精力但提供最小近期患者获益的选定干预措施和治疗。这些策略——尽管可能导致偏离常规标准的护理——支持在人员短缺引发的危机能力环境中最大化稀缺资源的总体效益的目标。这个伦理框架为机构领导者制定可操作的危机能力政策提供了基础,这些政策可以促进公平并支持医疗保健工作者。