Wiebe Kayla, Kelley Simon, Fecteau Annie, Levine Mark, Blajchman Iram, Shaul Randi Zlotnik, Kirsch Roxanne
Graduate Department of Philosophy, University of Toronto, Toronto, Canada.
Clinical Research, Division of Orthopedics, Department of Surgery, The Hospital for Sick Children, Toronto, Canada.
Paediatr Child Health. 2023 Oct 28;29(2):74-80. doi: 10.1093/pch/pxad067. eCollection 2024 May.
Globally exacerbated surgical waitlists have provided the opportunity to reflect on prioritization and resource allocation decisions. The unique circumstances of paediatric surgery and consequences of surgical delay prompted the study reported in this paper. As part of a larger project to attend to prioritization in our surgical waitlists, we conducted a Quality Improvement study, the purpose of which is to understand surgeon's perspectives regarding the ethical and practical realities of surgical prioritization at our institution. The study comprises semi-structured interviews with nine full-time paediatric surgeons from a variety of subspecialties conducted at our institution, which is a tertiary paediatric hospital with ten surgical subspecialties in a publicly funded healthcare system. Participants articulated how they prioritize their waitlists, and how they understand ethical prioritization. These findings resonate with the growing public concern for ethical practice in healthcare delivery and transparency in prioritization and resource allocation practices. Specifically, more transparency, consistency, and support is required in prioritization practices. This work highlights the importance of institutional dialogue regarding surgical case prioritization. Because quality improvement work is necessarily site-specific, concrete generalizations cannot be offered. However, the insights gleaned from these interviews and the process by which they were gleaned are a valuable knowledge-sharing resource for any institution that is interested in ongoing quality improvement work. The objectives here were to clarify the goals of prioritization within the institution, improve prioritization practices, and make them more ethical and transparent.
全球范围内手术等候名单的加剧,为反思优先级确定和资源分配决策提供了契机。小儿外科的独特情况以及手术延迟的后果促使了本文所报道的这项研究。作为处理手术等候名单优先级这一更大项目的一部分,我们开展了一项质量改进研究,其目的是了解外科医生对于我们机构手术优先级确定在伦理和实际方面的看法。该研究包括在我们机构对九名来自不同亚专业的全职小儿外科医生进行半结构化访谈,我们机构是一家在公共资助医疗体系中有十个手术亚专业的三级儿童医院。参与者阐述了他们如何确定等候名单的优先级,以及他们如何理解伦理优先级。这些发现与公众对医疗服务中伦理实践以及优先级确定和资源分配实践透明度日益增长的关注相呼应。具体而言,在优先级确定实践中需要更多的透明度、一致性和支持。这项工作凸显了关于手术病例优先级确定的机构对话的重要性。由于质量改进工作必然是针对特定地点的,所以无法给出具体的概括。然而,从这些访谈中获得的见解以及获取这些见解的过程,对于任何对持续质量改进工作感兴趣的机构来说,都是宝贵的知识共享资源。这里的目标是明确机构内优先级确定的目标,改进优先级确定实践,并使其更具伦理和透明度。