Affiliation:
1. Pediatrics, Oklahoma State University Center for Health Sciences, Tulsa, OK, USA
Abstract
The latest Omicron variant of the novel coronavirus has itself created a novel situation—bringing attention to the topic of healthcare rationing among hospitalized pediatric patients. This may be the first time that many pediatricians, nurses, parents, and public health officials have been compelled to engage in uncomfortable discussions about the allocation of medical care/resources. Simply put, finite budgets, resources, and a dwindling healthcare workforce do not permit all patients to receive unlimited medical care. Triage and bedside rationing decisions are happening in a range of difficult everyday circumstances both implicitly and explicitly, but in ways not recognized by even the best ethically framed intentions. Clinicians and hospital administrators have largely been left on their own “to flatten the rationing curve” in hopes that resources never have to be explicitly rationed at their facility. Unfortunately, the downstream result is a misinformed and distrustful public (i.e. parents, guardians, and caregivers) filled with people who are already burdened with inflammatory pseudoscience narratives and deficits in health literacy. This paper aims to elevate a more thoughtful conversation about healthcare rationing by analyzing some existing ethical principles/framework developed for rationing decision making during previous emergency responses and drawing from the day-to-day clinical perspectives of a frontline pediatric acute care/hospitalist.
Subject
Philosophy,Issues, ethics and legal aspects,Medicine (miscellaneous)
Reference19 articles.
1. How Physicians Allocate Scarce Resources at the Bedside: A Systematic Review of Qualitative Studies
2. Death and dying in the US: the barriers to the benefits of palliative and hospice care
3. World Health Organization. COVID-19 is a pandemic. 2020. https://www.who.int/india/emergencies/coronavirus-disease-(covid-19)#:∼:text=On%2011%20March%202020%2C,to%20save%20people%27s%20lives. Accessed January 16, 2022.
4. World Health Organization. Weekly epidemiological update on COVID-19—11 January 2022. 2022. https://www.who.int/publications/m/item/weekly-epidemiological-update-on-covid-19-11-January-2022. Accessed 16 January 2022.
5. Coronavirus in the US. Latest Map and Case Count. https://www.nytimes.com/interactive/2021/us/covid-cases.html. Accessed 16 January 2022.
Cited by
1 articles.
订阅此论文施引文献
订阅此论文施引文献,注册后可以免费订阅5篇论文的施引文献,订阅后可以查看论文全部施引文献