U.S. panel outlines how doctors should ration care in a pandemic
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[March 31, 2020]
By Julie Steenhuysen
CHICAGO (Reuters) - A panel of advisers
issued recommendations for new crisis treatment standards on Monday
advising doctors and hospitals on how they should decide which patients
with COVID-19 get lifesaving care and which do not.
The report from a National Academies of Sciences committee offers a
framework for treating patients during the COVID-19 crisis that shifts
from saving individual patients to a focus on saving the most
individuals possible. It was issued at the request of Admiral Brett
Giroir, U.S. assistant secretary for health and Robert Kadlec, U.S.
assistant secretary of preparedness and response.
The new Crisis Standards of Care guidelines come as the United States
faces the prospect of rationing ventilators and other essential
equipment to cope with a surge of severely ill patients infected with
the new respiratory virus that is projected to kill between 100,000 and
200,000 people in the United States.
In the report, the panel says that in spite of efforts to forestall the
virus, it expects "a growing number of hospitals will face medical needs
that outpace the existing supply of ventilators, protective equipment
and other essentials, as well as the rate that enhanced supply can be
produced, acquired and put into place. These circumstances will require
a shift to Crisis Standards of Care."
The panel says there is "an imminent need to prepare for difficult
decisions about allocating limited resources, triaging patients to
receive life-saving care and minimizing the negative impacts of
delivering care under crisis conditions.”
First issued in 2009, Crisis Standards of Care were used sporadically to
help doctors respond to Hurricanes Katrina and Sandy, and doctors were
preparing to use them in the 2009 H1N1 flu pandemic, but never did,
experts said.
They characterized the government's request for an updated report -
tailored to the COVID-19 pandemic - as both sobering and responsible.
"It's important that we have these ahead of time so that doctors don't
have to decide these things on the fly," said Dr. Amesh Adalja, an
infectious disease specialist and senior scholar at the John Hopkins
Bloomberg School of Public Health.
"This is serious business," said Dr. William Schaffner, an infectious
disease expert at Vanderbilt University Medical Center. "If it's not
done, no one gets good care."
'AN URGENCY'
According to the National Academies, the standards shift the focus from
what is best for the individual to what can help save the most lives,
especially when equipment, staffing and materials are in short supply.
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Silvio Alecio, 48, cuts face masks with scissors, after California
Governor Gavin Newsom's implemented statewide "stay at home order"
directing the state's 40 million residents to stay in their homes in
the face of the fast-spreading coronavirus disease (COVID-19), that
will be donated to doctors, nurses and EMTs around the country, in
Oakland, California, U.S., March 23, 2020. Picture taken March 23,
2020. REUTERS/Shannon Stapleton
They do not dictate which choices should be made, but provide a
framework for making them. They also protect physicians from
malpractice lawsuits, said Lawrence Gostin, an expert in global
health law at Georgetown University, who helped write the original
guidelines in 2009.
Gostin said individual states were responsible for setting
malpractice standards, but in a pandemic, the hope is that the
federal government would implement the standards nationally, which
would then be passed along to states and then to local hospitals.
Gostin said the fact that U.S. officials requested the report
signals "an urgency in trying to prepare hospitals for acute
shortages, which will have implications for deciding who can live
and who can die."
Under normal standards of care, doctors in the United States have a
duty to provide the highest-quality treatment available.
"If someone is in respiratory arrest and the standard of care is a
ventilator and there aren't enough, doctors can be sued," Gostin
said.
Dr. Alta Charo, a bioethicist at the University of Wisconsin, said
shifting to crisis standards allowed states or healthcare providers
to relax or change certain rules, such as using medical devices in
ways they were not originally approved for, if they offer a
"better-than-nothing option."
A key principle is that doctors never withhold care solely because
of age, disability, race or gender.
"These are critical life or death decisions. Doctors and hospitals
shouldn't be making them themselves," Gostin said.
(Reporting by Julie Steenhuysen; Editing by Peter Cooney)
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