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Explore the ethical complexities of applying altered but ethical standards of care in emergencies like pandemics and terrorist attacks. Learn about resource allocation challenges and ethical decision-making in critical situations with limited resources.
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Applying Altered but Ethical Standards of Care David A. Fleming, M.D., MA, FACP Professor of Clinical Medicine Director, MU Center for Health Ethics University of Missouri School of Medicine 573-882-2738 flemingd@health.missouri.edu
Objectives • Understand the ethical complexities of emerging threats requiring emergent responses with limited resources • Recognize that altered standards are still evidence based standards deployed in nontraditional ways and places • Ethical guidance in establishing standards when all cannot be saved
Emerging Threats • Pandemic: H5N1 (“bird flu”), VRSA, SARS • CDC estimates that the next influenza pandemic will result in 89,000 to 207,000 lost lives and $71.3 Bil. to $166.4 Bil. economic loss. • Terrorist attack: anthrax, radiation, bombing • Natural: hurricane, earthquake, flood
Potential Problem • Many epidemic and bioterrorist agent illnesses will overwhelm current health care resources. • Current ethics-based criteria for allocation of resources will not apply in situations of mass casualty. • Duty to Respond and Treat • Allocation of scarce healthcare resources
Six Critical Challenges in Pandemic Planning • The concept of preparedness is not clearly defined. • Some preparedness efforts can’t be resolved by individual hospitals. • Demand for healthcare will exceed capacity. • Staffing will be inadequate. • Funding is inadequate. • Hospital solvency may be threatened. Center on Biosecurity, University of Pittsburg Medical Center
Influenza Pandemic • 90 Mil sick (~1/3 of population 303,824,640) • 10 Mil hospitalized • 1.5 Mil requiring ICU • 1.9 Mil deaths USDHHS. HHS Pandemic Influenza Plan. 2005 www.hhs.gov.pandemicflu/plan
Ventilators Needed • 105,000 ventilators available in U.S. • during a regular flu season, 100,000 are in use (McNeil, 2006) • National Preparedness Plan indicates a potential need for 742,500 ventilators in a worst case scenario pandemic. • $3.8 billion authorized for flu preparedness by Congress • But to buy enough ventilators for a flu outbreak similar to that of 1918 it is estimated that $18 billion will be required.
Missouri Pandemic Estimates 2007Hospital Industry Data Institute, CDC • If 35% attack rate (population 5.6 Mil) • >27,000 admissions • >5,500 deaths (500-800 a week) • Non ICU beds available (staffed) 21,890 • ICU beds available (staffed) 1,629 • capacity exceeded by week 4 • Ventilators available 386 (20% of 1,931) • capacity will be exceeded by week 2 and last over 8 weeks
Choosing an ethics framework • Traditional focus on “respect for patient autonomy” is ineffective for resource poor environments • A Utilitarian or “distributive justice” model is more effective for scarce resource allocation.
Ethical Complexities • Challenges of professional obligation • Selectively not treating those who otherwise might be saved • Meeting “altered” standards of care • Moral discomfort … conscientious objection • Work force integrity • Physical and emotional exhaustion • Personal risk • Alternative providers • Alternative sites of care • Organizational integrity … loss of resources • Public trust • Many will not have access who once did • Unexpected questions of Futility • Questions of fairness, bias, and disparity • Questions of transparency, consistency, accountability
Ethical Options Considered • Utilitarian (White) • Maximize lives saved • Maximize “life years” saved • Opportunity to life through all “life stages” • Elderly and those with functional impairment denied access • Values, virtues and duties (Tuohey) • Solidarity and duty (Brody) • Community (Berlinger)
Who Should Receive Life Support?White et al. Ann Int Med 2009;150:132-138 • Utilitarian perspective • Based on prognosis for survival to discharge • Life, life years, life stages • Social value • Instrumental value (“multiplier effect”) • Public engagement
A Matrix for Ethical Decision Making in a Pandemic John Tuohey, Ph.D., St. Vincent Med. Ctr. Portland OR
Ethical Considerations • Contextual realities—communities rather than only hospitals and clinics • Solidarity within the profession • Duty to treat even if at risk • Same professional standards but in a different context • Solidarity within and between institutions • Solidarity between providers and community • Social solidarity • Shared duty
Importance of the Context of the Response • For Hospitals resource centered • ”altered standards protocols” • unquestioned authority and objectivity • For first responders person centered • Viability (futility) • Compassion and comfort (beneficence) • Parity (Justice) • Room for variability (regional, personal) • Alternative sites available
Maintaining Integrity • Mission-goals-ideals • Hospital—objective criteria for resource allocation • Community—person centered criteria • Professional—adapting competencies, standards, and practices to contextual changes
Futility • Do what is clinically indicated • Proportionate consideration of… • Medical effectiveness (prognosis) • Benefits/Burdens • Room for personal preference • Limits of autonomy (right to demand and refuse treatment)
Guiding Principles(obligations in a social context) • Consistency • Accountability • Transparency • Honesty • Reliability (safety) • Fairness
Guiding Values(personal context) • Medical Effectiveness • Benefit/Burden (Quality of Life) • Urgency • Safety • Preferences • Compassion
Fairness Healthcare resources are allocated fairly with a special concern for the most vulnerable With limited resources: • The fair distribution of scarce resources in an emergency is governed not by what is best for the individual, but rather “the greater good of the community.” • Decisions will be made that result in certain people getting some resources while others do not. • Not every need will be fulfilled in a disaster.
Respect All, by nature, are worthy of esteem and respect. All must know they will be cared for and treated with dignity. With limited resources: • some persons will receive treatment • some will receive limited treatment • some will receive palliative treatment
Missouri Altered Standards Committee • MO DHSS (Nancie McAnaugh) • Ventilator Protocol • Pediatric subcommittee • Regional triage team for rural systems • Prehospital triage protocol • EMS engagement (first responders) • Just-in-time “grief training” for managers and supervisors • Dialogue with trial attorneys association • Public feedback mechanism
Consortium • MU CHE and MO DHSS • Consortium of 4-5 ethics centers • Ethical guidelines of palliative care triage for Missouri • Statewide network of ethical committees • Availability of ethics consults and support