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1.
J Cancer Res Clin Oncol ; 150(7): 352, 2024 Jul 15.
Artículo en Inglés | MEDLINE | ID: mdl-39009898

RESUMEN

PURPOSE: Cancer care in Germany during the COVID-19 pandemic was affected by resource scarcity and the necessity to prioritize medical measures. This study explores ethical criteria for prioritization and their application in cancer practices from the perspective of German oncologists and other experts. METHODS: We conducted fourteen semi-structured interviews with German oncologists between February and July 2021 and fed findings of interviews and additional data on prioritizing cancer care into four structured group discussions, in January and February 2022, with 22 experts from medicine, nursing, law, ethics, health services research and health insurance. Interviews and group discussions were digitally recorded, transcribed verbatim and analyzed using qualitative content analysis. RESULTS: Narratives of the participants focus on "urgency" as most acceptable criterion for prioritization in cancer care. Patients who are considered curable and those with a high level of suffering, were given a high degree of "urgency." However, further analysis indicates that the "urgency" criterion needs to be further distinguished according to at least three different dimensions: "urgency" to (1) prevent imminent harm to life, (2) prevent future harm to life and (3) alleviate suffering. In addition, "urgency" is modulated by the "success," which can be reached by means of an intervention, and the "likelihood" of reaching that success. CONCLUSION: Our analysis indicates that while "urgency" is a well-established criterion, its operationalization in the context of oncology is challenging. We argue that combined conceptual and clinical analyses are necessary for a sound application of the "urgency" criterion to prioritization in cancer care.


Asunto(s)
COVID-19 , Neoplasias , Oncólogos , Investigación Cualitativa , Humanos , COVID-19/epidemiología , Neoplasias/terapia , Alemania/epidemiología , Masculino , SARS-CoV-2 , Femenino , Prioridades en Salud/ética , Oncología Médica/ética , Oncología Médica/métodos , Persona de Mediana Edad , Pandemias , Adulto
3.
Theor Med Bioeth ; 45(3): 167-181, 2024 Jun.
Artículo en Inglés | MEDLINE | ID: mdl-38806871

RESUMEN

This article examines some of the ethical challenges of prioritizing intensive care resources during the Covid-19 pandemic by comparing the Italian and United States contexts. After presenting an overview to the clinical, ethical, and public debates in Italy, the article will discuss the development of triage allocation protocols in United States hospitals. Resource allocation criteria underwent increased scrutiny and critique in both countries, which resulted in modified professional and expert guidance regarding healthcare ethics during times of emergency and resource scarcity.


Asunto(s)
COVID-19 , Cuidados Críticos , Asignación de Recursos para la Atención de Salud , SARS-CoV-2 , Triaje , Humanos , COVID-19/epidemiología , Italia/epidemiología , Estados Unidos/epidemiología , Cuidados Críticos/ética , Triaje/ética , Asignación de Recursos para la Atención de Salud/ética , Asignación de Recursos/ética , Pandemias/ética , Prioridades en Salud/ética , Recursos en Salud/ética
4.
Bioethics ; 38(5): 401-409, 2024 Jun.
Artículo en Inglés | MEDLINE | ID: mdl-38602177

RESUMEN

The research we fund today will improve the health of people who will live tomorrow. But future people will not all benefit equally: decisions we make about what research to prioritize will predictably affect when and how much different people benefit from research. Organizations that fund health research should thus fairly account for the health needs of future populations when setting priorities. To this end, some research funders aim to allocate research resources in accordance with disease burden, prioritizing illnesses that cause more morbidity and mortality. In this article, I defend research funders' practice of aligning research funding with disease burden but argue that funders should aim to align research funding with future-rather than present-disease burden. I suggest that research funders should allocate research funding in proportion to aggregated estimates of disease burden over the period when research could plausibly start to yield benefits until indefinitely into the future.


Asunto(s)
Investigación Biomédica , Humanos , Investigación Biomédica/ética , Apoyo a la Investigación como Asunto , Prioridades en Salud/ética , Costo de Enfermedad , Predicción , Asignación de Recursos/ética
5.
CMAJ Open ; 9(3): E848-E854, 2021.
Artículo en Inglés | MEDLINE | ID: mdl-34493551

RESUMEN

BACKGROUND: When vaccine supplies are anticipated to be limited, necessitating the vaccination of certain groups earlier than others, the assessment of values and preferences of stakeholders is an important component of an ethically sound vaccine prioritization framework. The objective of this study was to conduct a priority-setting exercise to establish an expert stakeholder perspective on the relative importance of COVID-19 vaccination strategies in Canada. METHODS: The priority-setting exercise included a survey of stakeholders that was conducted from July 22 to Aug. 14, 2020. Stakeholders included clinical and public health expert groups, provincial and territorial committees and national Indigenous groups, patient and community advocacy representatives and experts, health professional associations and federal government departments. Survey results were analyzed to identify trends. RESULTS: Of 155 stakeholders contacted, 76 surveys were received for a participation rate of 49%. During a period of anticipated initial vaccine scarcity for all pandemic scenarios, stakeholders generally considered the most important vaccination strategy to be protecting those who are most vulnerable to severe illness and death from COVID-19. This was followed in importance by strategies to protect health care capacity, minimize transmission of SARS-CoV-2 and protect critical infrastructure. INTERPRETATION: This priority-setting exercise established that there is general alignment in the values and preferences across stakeholder groups: the most important vaccination strategy at the time of limited initial vaccine availability is to protect those who are most vulnerable. The findings of this priority-setting exercise provided a timely expert perspective to guide early public health planning for COVID-19 vaccines.


Asunto(s)
Vacunas contra la COVID-19/administración & dosificación , COVID-19/prevención & control , Prioridades en Salud/ética , Vacunación/métodos , COVID-19/diagnóstico , COVID-19/epidemiología , COVID-19/virología , Vacunas contra la COVID-19/provisión & distribución , Canadá/epidemiología , Creación de Capacidad/organización & administración , Transmisión de Enfermedad Infecciosa/prevención & control , Empleos en Salud/estadística & datos numéricos , Empleos en Salud/tendencias , Prioridades en Salud/organización & administración , Humanos , Salud Pública/legislación & jurisprudencia , SARS-CoV-2/genética , SARS-CoV-2/inmunología , Índice de Severidad de la Enfermedad , Participación de los Interesados , Encuestas y Cuestionarios/estadística & datos numéricos , Vacunación/estadística & datos numéricos , Poblaciones Vulnerables
7.
Scand J Trauma Resusc Emerg Med ; 29(1): 77, 2021 Jun 04.
Artículo en Inglés | MEDLINE | ID: mdl-34088336

RESUMEN

The Nordic countries have differed in their approach as to how much priority for COVID19 vaccine access should be given to health care workers. Two countries decided not to give health care workers highest priority, raising some controversy. The rationale was that those at highest risk of dying needed to come first. However, when it comes to protecting those at the highest risk of dying from COVID19, their needs and vulnerabilities need to be considered more broadly than just in terms of the individual protection that vaccination will afford them. Likewise, when considering whether to prioritize health care workers for the vaccine, their crucial role in keeping the health care system operational, and right to a safe work environment need to be factored in. Below we review several ethical arguments for why frontline health care workers and first responders should receive priority access to the COVID19 vaccine.


Asunto(s)
Vacunas contra la COVID-19/uso terapéutico , COVID-19/prevención & control , Socorristas , Personal de Salud , Prioridades en Salud/ética , Atención a la Salud , Análisis Ético , Humanos , Factores de Riesgo , SARS-CoV-2 , Países Escandinavos y Nórdicos , Lugar de Trabajo
9.
Int J Equity Health ; 20(1): 127, 2021 05 25.
Artículo en Inglés | MEDLINE | ID: mdl-34034747

RESUMEN

To promote social justice and equity, global health research should meaningfully engage communities throughout projects: from setting agendas onwards. But communities, especially those that are considered disadvantaged or marginalised, rarely have a say in the priorities of the research projects that aim to help them. So far, there remains limited ethical guidance and resources on how to share power with communities in health research priority-setting. This paper presents an "ethical toolkit" for academic researchers and their community partners to use to design priority-setting processes that meaningfully include the communities impacted by their projects. An empirical reflective equilibrium approach was employed to develop the toolkit. Conceptual work articulated ethical considerations related to sharing power in g0l0o0bal health research priority-setting, developed guidance on how to address them, and created an initial version of the toolkit. Empirical work (51 in-depth interviews, 1 focus group, 2 case studies in India and the Philippines) conducted in 2018 and 2019 then tested those findings against information from global health research practice. The final ethical toolkit is a reflective project planning aid. It consists of 4 worksheets (Worksheet 1- Selecting Partners; Worksheet 2- Deciding to Partner; Worksheet 3- Deciding to Engage with the Wider Community; Worksheet 4- Designing Priority-setting) and a Companion Document detailing how to use them. Reflecting on and discussing the questions in Worksheets 1 to 4 before priority-setting will help deliver priority-setting processes that share power with communities and projects with research topics and questions that more accurately reflect their healthcare and system needs.


Asunto(s)
Investigación Biomédica , Participación de la Comunidad , Salud Global , Prioridades en Salud , Investigación Biomédica/organización & administración , Prioridades en Salud/ética , Humanos
10.
Bioethics ; 35(4): 380-384, 2021 05.
Artículo en Inglés | MEDLINE | ID: mdl-33751622

RESUMEN

Much of the ethical discourse concerning the coronavirus pandemic has focused on the allocation of scarce resources, be it potentially beneficial new treatments, ventilators, intensive care beds, or oxygen. Somewhat ironically, the more important ethical issues may lie elsewhere, just as the more important medical issues do not concern intensive care or treatment for COVID-19 patients, but rather the diversion towards these modes of care at the expense of non-Covid patients and treatment. In this article I explore how ethicists can and should prioritize which ethical issues to deal with, and develop a method of triage for identification and prioritization of ethical issues both in the next public health emergency and in bioethics more widely.


Asunto(s)
Discusiones Bioéticas , COVID-19 , Eticistas , Prioridades en Salud/ética , Humanos , Investigación/normas , SARS-CoV-2
12.
Bioethics ; 35(4): 348-355, 2021 05.
Artículo en Inglés | MEDLINE | ID: mdl-33559129

RESUMEN

The rapid development of vaccines against COVID-19 represents a huge achievement, and offers hope of ending the global pandemic. At least three COVID-19 vaccines have been approved or are about to be approved for distribution in many countries. However, with very limited initial availability, only a minority of the population will be able to receive vaccines this winter. Urgent decisions will have to be made about who should receive priority for access. Current policy in the UK appears to take the view that those who are most vulnerable to COVID-19 should get the vaccine first. While this is intuitively attractive, we argue that there are other possible values and criteria that need to be considered. These include both intrinsic and instrumental values. The former are numbers of lives saved, years of life saved, quality of the lives saved, quality-adjusted life-years (QALYs), and possibly others including age. Instrumental values include protecting healthcare systems and other broader societal interests, which might require prioritizing key worker status and having dependants. The challenge from an ethical point of view is to strike the right balance among these values. It also depends on effectiveness of different vaccines on different population groups and on modelling around cost-effectiveness of different strategies. It is a mistake to simply assume that prioritizing the most vulnerable is the best strategy. Although that could end up being the best approach, whether it is or not requires careful ethical and empirical analysis.


Asunto(s)
Vacunas contra la COVID-19/administración & dosificación , Vacunas contra la COVID-19/provisión & distribución , COVID-19/prevención & control , Análisis Ético , Prioridades en Salud/ética , Análisis Costo-Beneficio , Humanos , Años de Vida Ajustados por Calidad de Vida , SARS-CoV-2/inmunología , Valores Sociales , Reino Unido/epidemiología
13.
J Med Ethics ; 47(2): 108-112, 2021 02.
Artículo en Inglés | MEDLINE | ID: mdl-33335068

RESUMEN

One prominent view in recent literature on resource allocation is Persad, Emanuel and Wertheimer's complete lives framework for the rationing of lifesaving healthcare interventions (CLF). CLF states that we should prioritise the needs of individuals who have had less opportunity to experience the events that characterise a complete life. Persad et al argue that their system is the product of a successful process of reflective equilibrium-a philosophical methodology whereby theories, principles and considered judgements are balanced with each other and revised until we achieve an acceptable coherence between our various beliefs. Yet I argue that many of the principles and intuitions underpinning CLF conflict with each other, and that Persad et al have failed to achieve an acceptable coherence between them. I focus on three tensions in particular: the conflict between the youngest first principle and Persad et al's investment refinement; the conflict between current medical need and a concern for lifetime equality; and the tension between adopting an objective measure of complete lives and accommodating for differences in life narratives.


Asunto(s)
Toma de Decisiones/ética , Ética Clínica , Asignación de Recursos para la Atención de Salud/ética , Equidad en Salud/ética , Justicia Social , Triaje/ética , Atención a la Salud/ética , Análisis Ético , Prioridades en Salud/ética , Estado de Salud , Humanos , Principios Morales
14.
Bioethics ; 35(3): 229-236, 2021 03.
Artículo en Inglés | MEDLINE | ID: mdl-33068025

RESUMEN

Age rationing is a central issue in the health care priority-setting literature, but it has become ever more salient in the light of the Covid-19 outbreak, where health authorities in several countries have given higher priority to younger over older patients. But how is age rationing different under outbreak circumstances than under normal circumstances, and what does this difference imply for ethical theories? This is the topic of this paper. The paper argues that outbreaks such as that of Covid-19 involve special circumstances that change how age should influence our prioritization decisions, and that while this shift in circumstances poses a problem for consequentialist views such as utilitarianism and age-weighted consequentialism, contractualism is better equipped to cope with it. The paper then offers a contractualist prudential account of age rationing under outbreak circumstances.


Asunto(s)
Brotes de Enfermedades/ética , Análisis Ético , Teoría Ética , Asignación de Recursos para la Atención de Salud/ética , Prioridades en Salud/ética , Recursos en Salud/ética , Factores de Edad , COVID-19/epidemiología , Humanos
15.
J Med Ethics ; 47(2): 73-77, 2021 02.
Artículo en Inglés | MEDLINE | ID: mdl-33106381

RESUMEN

As the USA contends with another surge in COVID-19 cases, hospitals may soon need to answer the unresolved question of who lives and dies when ventilator demand exceeds supply. Although most triage policies in the USA have seemingly converged on the use of clinical need and benefit as primary criteria for prioritisation, significant differences exist between institutions in how to assign priority to patients with identical medical prognoses: the so-called 'tie-breaker' situations. In particular, one's status as a frontline healthcare worker (HCW) has been a proposed criterion for prioritisation in the event of a tie. This article outlines two major grounds for reconsidering HCW prioritisation. The first recognises trust as an indispensable element of clinical care and mistrust as a hindrance to any public health strategy against the virus, thus raising concerns about the outward appearance of favouritism. The second considers the ways in which proponents of HCW prioritisation deviate from the very 'ethics frameworks' that often preface triage policies and serve to guide resource allocation-a rhetorical strategy that may undermine the very ethical foundations on which triage policies stand. By appealing to trust and consistency, we re-examine existing arguments in favour of HCW prioritisation and provide a more tenable justification for adjudicating on tie-breaker events during crisis standards of care.


Asunto(s)
COVID-19/terapia , Asignación de Recursos para la Atención de Salud/ética , Personal de Salud , Política de Salud , Hospitales/ética , Pandemias , Triaje/ética , Actitud Frente a la Salud , COVID-19/virología , Toma de Decisiones/ética , Disentimientos y Disputas , Ética , Ética Clínica , Prioridades en Salud/ética , Humanos , Ética Basada en Principios , Salud Pública/ética , Asignación de Recursos , SARS-CoV-2 , Confianza , Estados Unidos
17.
Dtsch Med Wochenschr ; 145(16): 1152-1156, 2020 08.
Artículo en Alemán | MEDLINE | ID: mdl-32791551

RESUMEN

In view of dramatically increasing patient numbers worldwide in the face of the corona pandemic and scarce resources in intensive care medicine in many countries, some of which are dramatically undersupplied, concerns and fears have spread among the population in Germany. Healthcare workers didn't know how to deal with an overload of the healthcare system. Numerous inquiries from concerned physicians as well as ethics committees prompted the German Interdisciplinary Association for Intensive Care and Emergency Medicine (DIVI) together with seven other medical associations to work out a clinical-ethical recommendation on "Decisions on resource allocation in emergency and intensive care in the context of the COVID-19 pandemic".


Asunto(s)
Infecciones por Coronavirus/terapia , Cuidados Críticos/ética , Pandemias/ética , Neumonía Viral/terapia , Planificación Anticipada de Atención/ética , COVID-19 , Cuidados Críticos/estadística & datos numéricos , Medicina de Emergencia/ética , Medicina de Emergencia/estadística & datos numéricos , Alemania/epidemiología , Prioridades en Salud/ética , Humanos
20.
Nat Rev Nephrol ; 16(10): 603-613, 2020 10.
Artículo en Inglés | MEDLINE | ID: mdl-32587403

RESUMEN

The American Society of Nephrology, the European Renal Association-European Dialysis and Transplant Association and the International Society of Nephrology Joint Working Group on Ethical Issues in Nephrology have identified ten broad areas of ethical concern as priority challenges that require collaborative action. Here, we describe these challenges - equity in access to kidney failure care, avoiding futile dialysis, reducing dialysis costs, shared decision-making in kidney failure care, living donor risk evaluation and decision-making, priority setting in kidney disease prevention and care, the ethical implications of genetic kidney diseases, responsible advocacy for kidney health and management of conflicts of interest - with the aim of highlighting the need for ethical analysis of specific issues, as well as for the development of tools and training to support clinicians who treat patients with kidney disease in practising ethically and contributing to ethical policy-making.


Asunto(s)
Nefrología/ética , Conflicto de Intereses , Control de Costos/ética , Toma de Decisiones Conjunta , Prioridades en Salud/ética , Accesibilidad a los Servicios de Salud/ética , Disparidades en Atención de Salud/ética , Humanos , Enfermedades Renales/genética , Trasplante de Riñón/ética , Inutilidad Médica/ética , Tráfico de Órganos/ética , Defensa del Paciente/ética , Diálisis Renal/economía , Diálisis Renal/ética , Insuficiencia Renal/terapia , Obtención de Tejidos y Órganos/ética
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