Resource allocation decisions under pandemic conditions: A cross-sectional survey of Ontario physicians

Author:

Rivera Raiza S.1,Anderson Joanna E.2,Dewar Brian3ORCID,Kwok Edmund S.H.4,Ramsay Tim3,Dowlatshahi Dar35,Fahed Robert35,Dyason Claire5,Shamy Michel35

Affiliation:

1. Department of Innovation in Medical Education, University of Ottawa, Ottawa, Ontario, Canada

2. Carleton University, Ottawa, Ontario, Canada

3. The Ottawa Hospital Research Institute, Ottawa, Ontario, Canada

4. Department of Emergency Medicine, University of Ottawa, Ottawa, Ontario, Canada

5. Department of Medicine, University of Ottawa, & The Ottawa Hospital, Ottawa, Ontario, Canada.

Abstract

The COVID-19 pandemic has forced physicians to confront difficult choices regarding the allocation of scarce resources, such as ventilators and critical care beds. Developing policies to guide the allocation of such resources has proven challenging. An understanding of physicians’ attitudes and beliefs surrounding resource allocation could help inform policymaking. As a replication and extension of a survey of Ottawa physicians conducted in 2020, we surveyed physicians across Ontario, Canada in April 2021. This survey examined physicians’ sense of preparedness to allocate critical care resources during the pandemic, attitudes concerning resource allocation policy, and approaches to resource allocation decision-making. Of the 253 responses included for analysis, the majority (67%) of respondents indicated feeling “somewhat” or “a little prepared” to make resource allocation decisions, while 20% indicated feeling “not at all prepared.” Most respondents (86%) agreed that a policy to guide resource allocation in the event of scarcity should exist. Physicians overwhelmingly agreed that important factors to consider when making resource allocation decisions included the patient likelihood of survival, frailty index, comorbidities, and cognitive status. Responses from the province-wide survey conducted in 2021 resemble the results of an analogous survey of Ottawa physicians conducted in 2020. Physicians generally felt underprepared to make resource allocation decisions and agreed that official policies should guide such decisions. Identification of factors relevant to resource allocation was remarkably consistent across this sample and that taken in 2020.

Publisher

Ovid Technologies (Wolters Kluwer Health)

Subject

General Medicine

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