1 / 26

Minnesota Pandemic Ethics Project: A Look at Vaccines

Minnesota Pandemic Ethics Project: A Look at Vaccines. Confronting the Ethics of Pandemic Influenza Planning: The 2008 Summit of the States J. Eline (Ellie) Garrett, JD Minnesota Center for Health Care Ethics on behalf of the Minnesota Pandemic Ethics Project Team.

nowles
Download Presentation

Minnesota Pandemic Ethics Project: A Look at Vaccines

An Image/Link below is provided (as is) to download presentation Download Policy: Content on the Website is provided to you AS IS for your information and personal use and may not be sold / licensed / shared on other websites without getting consent from its author. Content is provided to you AS IS for your information and personal use only. Download presentation by click this link. While downloading, if for some reason you are not able to download a presentation, the publisher may have deleted the file from their server. During download, if you can't get a presentation, the file might be deleted by the publisher.

E N D

Presentation Transcript


  1. Minnesota Pandemic Ethics Project: A Look at Vaccines Confronting the Ethics of Pandemic Influenza Planning: The 2008 Summit of the States J. Eline (Ellie) Garrett, JD Minnesota Center for Health Care Ethics on behalf of the Minnesota Pandemic Ethics Project Team

  2. Minnesota Center for Health Care Ethics 2006 Pandemic Influenza Ethics Project on Vaccines Vaccine 25 (2007) 6522-6536

  3. 2006 Vaccine Project • Diverse workgroup, ~35 participants • Prioritization based on • Risk of mortality • Vaccine response • Risk of transmission • Key worker role • Exposure risk not prioritized

  4. MN Pandemic Ethics Project2007 – present A collaboration between the Minnesota Center for Health Care Ethics and the University of Minnesota Center for Bioethics funded by the Minnesota Department of Health

  5. MN Center for Health Care Ethics J. Eline Garrett Karen G. Gervais Ruth Mickelsen Angela Witt Prehn Dorothy E. Vawter U of MN Center for Bioethics Debra A. DeBruin Jeffrey Kahn JP Leider Joan Liaschenko Mary Faith Marshall Steven Miles Elizabeth Parilla Carol Tauer Susan Wolf Team Members

  6. Scope of Project • Ethical frameworks for rationing health-related resources during severe pandemic • Vaccines • N95s • Masks • Antivirals (treatment and prophylaxis) • Ventilators • Recommendations, not mandates

  7. Pandemic: Assumptions for Severe Pandemic • Groups at risk • Very young • Very old • Co-morbidities • Healthy 15-40 yr olds • 2 sources of mortality • Flu • Disrupted critical infrastructures • Guidance is context-specific

  8. Process • Comprehensive review of plans and literature • AW Prehn, DE Vawter. Ethical Guidance for Rationing Scarce Health-Related Resources in a Severe Influenza Pandemic: Literature and Plan Review (2008) • Convened 100+ Minnesotans to develop preliminary guidance • Diverse – expert and “lay” • Community engagement (in process) • Web-based public comment • Small groups – metro and rural

  9. Ethical Guidance for Rationing in Severe Pandemic As of March 2008

  10. MN Ethical Frameworks: Overview • Statewide, public-private perspective • Guidance for decision-making • Commitments • Principles • Goals • Strategies

  11. Ethical Commitments • Pursue common good • Be accountable, transparent, trustworthy • Promote solidarity, mutual responsibility • Respond fairly, effectively, efficiently

  12. Principles and Goals • Protect the population’s health • Reduce mortality and serious morbidity • Protect public safety and civil order • Reduce disruption to critical infrastructures • Promote public understanding and confidence

  13. Principles and Goals (cont.) • Treat people fairly, recognizing moral equality of all • Reduce significant differences in mortality/morbidity • Remove barriers to fair access • Honor reciprocity obligations to workers • Reduce significant differences in opportunities for normal lifespan • Use fair process • Principles (not goals)are co-equal; must be balanced

  14. Strategies: General • Do not ration based on: • Social value (gender, socio-economic class, race, citizenship, etc.) • Quality of life • Duration of extended life • First-come, first-served • Ration based on combinations of clinical and non-clinical considerations

  15. Key Worker Status • To reduce mortality and disruption of infrastructures • Highest priority goes to workers with additional characteristics, e.g., high exposure, risk of mortality • Usually prioritized simultaneously with groups in general population, based on different considerations

  16. Age-based Rationing? • An alternative to random processes • Depends on broad public agreement • Children before adults? • Younger adults before older? • Elders before others? • MN not alone in considering age • WHO • US Interagency Working Group • Indiana 2006 recommendations

  17. A Look at One Framework:Vaccines

  18. De-Prioritized or Excluded Natural immunity Medical contraindications Unacceptable vaccine response Imminently and irreversibly dying Satisfactory alternative protections

  19. Strategies: 2 Parallel Tracks with 6 Tiers

  20. Track A – Key Workers • Tiers based on combinations of: • Risk of occupational exposure • Risk of morbidity/mortality • “Irreplaceability” • Vaccine response

  21. Track B – General Population • Tiers based on combinations of • Risk of morbidity/mortality • Vaccine response • Possibly age (children at moderate risk prioritized over adults at moderate risk)

  22. Moving from 2006 to Current Project • Adjust resource-specific frameworks to work as a package (and to coordinate with comprehensive plan) • Don’t systematically disadvantage (or advantage) any group • More attention to occupational exposure risk • Possibility of age-based rationing (esp. prioritizing kids)

  23. Fit with Feds? • 2005 HHS guidance for moderate pandemic • Proposed federal guidance for severe pandemic: • Multiple goals, tracks and tiers • Protects infrastructures • Prioritizes children before adults in some circumstances • Attends less to differences in response and availability of alternative protections • Attends to homeland security and national defense goals

  24. Draft Reports • DE Vawter, JE Garrett, AW Prehn, et al. For the Good of Us All: Ethically Rationing Health Resources in Minnesota in a Severe Influenza Pandemic: Preliminary Report (2008) • DA DeBruin, E Parilla, J Liaschenko, et al. Implementing Ethical Frameworks for Rationing Scarce Health Resources in Minnesota During Severe Influenza Pandemic (2008) • Available (soon) at www.stolaf.edu/mnethx and www.bioethics.umn.edu

  25. Next Steps • Public comment (web-based) • Watch www.stolaf.edu/mnethx or www.bioethics.umn.edu • Public engagement pilot • Small groups • Metro, rural

  26. For more information • Ellie Garrett MN Center for Health Care Ethics garrette@stolaf.edu (612) 964-9425 • Contact info for other team members: www.stolaf.edu/mnethx orwww.bioethics.umn.edu

More Related