Chakraborty Rhyddhi, Achour Nebil
School of Allied Health and Social Care, Anglia Ruskin University, Cambridge CB1 1PT, UK.
Healthcare (Basel). 2024 Jan 8;12(2):146. doi: 10.3390/healthcare12020146.
Triage is a dynamic and complex decision-making process to determine fair access to medical care in mass casualty situations. Triage takes place through healthcare settings including Intensive Care Units (ICUs). Triage governing principles have been subject to ethical debates for a long time specifically with the recent global pandemic of COVID-19. This study aims to revisit the ethical principles guiding patient prioritisation during recent COVID-19 disaster triage in the Indian subcontinent and attempts to look for principles with consideration of social justice.
Key electronic databases such as WHO, EMBASE, and DOAJ were used to access published literature relating to ICU triage in the Indian subcontinent. Literature on and from 2015-2022 were included in this study. The SPICE framework was used to identify the literature. The Inclusion criteria were as follows: Literature with ethical connotations focusing on India and neighbouring countries, and in an ICU setting during pandemics. The Exclusion criteria were as follows: Literature focusing on other countries, without ethical foundations, hospital admissions, and non-COVID-19 ICU admissions. The PRISMA standard was applied to screen the appropriate literature. The BOOLEAN operator "OR" was used to enhance the literature search. Finally, six papers were found suitable for this study and thus were included in the literature review. Additionally, for the second time, the frequency of certain ethical phrases was reassessed in the plans and guidelines to check the changed awareness of ethical pandemic planning, if any. A thematic analysis was applied to analyse the data and generate findings and new knowledge.
The findings highlight gaps in knowledge around ICU triaging in the region which indicates the scope of better ethical pandemic preparation at the regional level. The findings show that there is a debate between researchers on prioritisation from available resources and ethical perspectives and principles associated with fair access to healthcare even during pandemic times. The literature also highlights enhancing the regional capacity and building equitable approaches to reduce existing health inequities and the need of the social justice framework for ICU triaging during a pandemic.
ICU triaging in five South Asian neighbour nations was studied for the presence of a guided ethical framework. Additionally, for the second time, certain ethical phrases were reassessed in the plans and guidelines; however, usage of those terms was found to be significantly low. The discussion shows that the plans and guidelines have the scope to improve ethical ICU triaging in these countries and in the specific region. After analysing different ethical guidelines, this study emphasises that there is a need for a just and fair framework, specifically a social justice framework in ICU triage in the subcontinent to address the underlying health inequities.
分诊是一个动态且复杂的决策过程,旨在确定在大规模伤亡情况下公平获得医疗护理的机会。分诊在包括重症监护病房(ICU)在内的医疗机构中进行。分诊的指导原则长期以来一直是伦理辩论的主题,尤其是在最近的新冠疫情期间。本研究旨在重新审视在印度次大陆最近的新冠疫情灾难分诊期间指导患者优先级排序的伦理原则,并试图寻找考虑社会正义的原则。
使用世界卫生组织(WHO)、EMBASE和DOAJ等关键电子数据库获取与印度次大陆ICU分诊相关的已发表文献。本研究纳入了2015年至2022年期间的文献。采用SPICE框架来识别文献。纳入标准如下:具有伦理内涵且聚焦于印度及周边国家、在大流行期间ICU环境中的文献。排除标准如下:聚焦于其他国家、无伦理基础、医院入院情况以及非新冠ICU入院情况的文献。应用PRISMA标准筛选合适的文献。使用布尔运算符“OR”来加强文献搜索。最后,发现六篇论文适合本研究,因此被纳入文献综述。此外,再次对计划和指南中某些伦理短语的出现频率进行重新评估,以检查伦理大流行规划意识是否有变化(如有)。应用主题分析法来分析数据并得出研究结果和新知识。
研究结果突出了该地区ICU分诊方面的知识差距,这表明在区域层面有更好的伦理大流行准备的空间。研究结果表明,即使在大流行时期,研究人员在从可用资源、伦理角度以及与公平获得医疗保健相关的原则来确定优先级排序方面也存在争议。文献还强调要提高区域能力并建立公平的方法以减少现有的健康不平等现象,以及在大流行期间ICU分诊需要社会正义框架。
对五个南亚邻国的ICU分诊进行了研究,以确定是否存在指导性伦理框架。此外,再次对计划和指南中的某些伦理短语进行了重新评估;然而,发现这些术语的使用频率极低。讨论表明,这些计划和指南有改进这些国家及特定地区伦理ICU分诊的空间。在分析了不同的伦理指南后,本研究强调,需要一个公正公平的框架,特别是在次大陆的ICU分诊中需要一个社会正义框架来解决潜在的健康不平等问题。