Ethical Triage and Scarce Resource Allocation During Public Health Emergencies: Tenets and Procedures
- 1 July 2007
- journal article
- Published by Taylor & Francis in Hospital Topics
- Vol. 85 (3) , 16-25
- https://doi.org/10.3200/htps.85.3.16-25
Abstract
Public health emergencies may result in mass casualties and a surge in demand for hospital-based care. Healthcare standards may need to be altered to respond to an imbalance between demands for care and resources. Clinical decisions that involve triage and scarce resource allocation may present unique ethical challenges. To address these challenges, the authors detailed tenets and procedures to guide triage and scarce resource allocation during public health emergencies. The authors propose health care organizations deploy a Triage and Scarce Resource Allocation Team to over-see and guide ethically challenging clinical decision-making during a crisis period. The authors' goal is to help healthcare organizations and clinicians balance public health responsibilities and their duty to individual patients during emergencies in as equitable and humane a manner as possible.Keywords
This publication has 23 references indexed in Scilit:
- Concept of Operations for Triage of Mechanical Ventilation in an EpidemicAcademic Emergency Medicine, 2006
- Priority setting in hospitals: Fairness, inclusiveness, and the problem of institutional power differencesSocial Science & Medicine, 2005
- The HIPAA Privacy Rule and Bioterrorism Planning, Prevention, and ResponseBiosecurity and Bioterrorism: Biodefense Strategy, Practice, and Science, 2004
- Defining community acquired pneumonia severity on presentation to hospital: an international derivation and validation studyThorax, 2003
- Protecting the Public's Health in An Era of Bioterrorism: The Model State Emergency Health Powers ActAccountability in Research, 2003
- Collaboration Between Public Health and Law Enforcement: New Paradigms and Partnerships for Bioterrorism Planning and ResponseEmerging Infectious Diseases, 2002
- Bioterrorism, Public Health, and Civil LibertiesNew England Journal of Medicine, 2002
- A Prediction Rule to Identify Low-Risk Patients with Community-Acquired PneumoniaNew England Journal of Medicine, 1997
- The preferential treatment of VIPs in the emergency departmentThe American Journal of Emergency Medicine, 1996
- Ethical Considerations in the Allocation of Organs and Other Scarce Medical Resources Among PatientsArchives of internal medicine (1960), 1995