Ethical dilemma for healthcare professionals facing elderly dementia patients during the COVID-19 pandemic.

Encephale

Hôpital Bretonneau (AP-HP.7), 23, rue Joseph-de-Maistre, 75018 Paris, France.

Published: October 2022

AI Article Synopsis

  • The management of elderly dementia patients with COVID-19 highlights significant ethical dilemmas, as healthcare staff face tough decisions without proper guidelines, leading to emotional distress and burnout.
  • The principle of distributive justice is compromised, as care prioritizes survival over fair treatment, causing moral conflicts within the healthcare team.
  • Collaborative decision-making, involving all caregivers—especially nurses and care assistants—can provide a diverse perspective and help navigate these challenges while minimizing biases in critical patient care decisions.

Article Abstract

The management of elderly patients with dementia and COVID-19 infections without access to an intensive care unit gives rise to serious ethical conflicts. Therapeutic decisions have been made in psychogeriatric units, leaving a heavy moral burden on staff. They had to deal with the most difficult patients without the support of appropriate guidelines. The gap between established rules and hospital reality led to psychological distress and burnout. Managing uncertainty in medical decisions is a skill that doctors and staff learn through experience. However, with the COVID-19 pandemic, uncertainty about patient outcomes seems no longer acceptable. Geriatric triage has challenged professional conscience, emotions and values. The principle of distributive justice, which consists of giving each person in society what is rightfully his or hers, is not being respected during this pandemic. Charity has been reduced to patient survival. Staffs need to make decisions together, and it is important to allow all carers access to a space for reflection. In our unit, the involvement of nurses and care assistants in the decision-making process for patient care is crucial especially for refusal of care. Their view of the patient's condition is different from that of the doctors, as they provide daily care to the patient and stay in the wards for several hours with them. By including as many people as possible in the reflection, we could avoid moral or personal prejudices related to these difficult decisions. The current pandemic can give new meaning to team thinking, giving everyone a voice without hierarchical barriers. With these new waves of COVID-19, we need to rethink our therapeutic conduct for elderly patients with dementia to avoid ethical failure.

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Source
http://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pmc/articles/PMC8542442PMC
http://dx.doi.org/10.1016/j.encep.2021.09.003DOI Listing

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