Babies of extremely low birthweight and elderly adults both require expensive and scarce resources, and both have a relatively poor prognosis for survival if they require intensive care. Thus, proposals for rationing often target one or both of these groups. We suspected that although mortality rates might be higher in the neonatal intensive care unit (NICU) than in the adult intensive care unit (ICU), NICU care might nevertheless be more cost effective, where cost efficiency is measured along the dimension of resources targeted to survivors.
View Article and Find Full Text PDFBackground: The persistent differences between those who question the appropriateness of aggressive resuscitative measures for many extremely low birth weight (ELBW) infants (birth weight < 1001 g) and those who generally initiate such treatment has been a source of ongoing tension for physicians, parents, judges, and policymakers. We believe that much of this tension may be a result of the way the issue is framed. We began this study with the intuition that although many ELBW infants die, most succumb quickly.
View Article and Find Full Text PDF