AI Article Synopsis

  • COVID-19 triage protocols are developed to manage resource shortages in ICUs and have sparked ethical debates, particularly regarding potential biases against certain groups based on age, frailty, or perceived social value.
  • The online Democratic Deliberation conducted in May and June 2022 in Quebec and Ontario aimed to gather public opinions on acceptable considerations and values that should guide these protocols.
  • Analysis revealed three main themes: the need for public acceptance of the protocols, essential considerations to include in triage decisions, and conditions that could enhance acceptance, with participants generally favoring prioritization based on survival prognosis and advocating for structured decision-making to reduce subjectivity.

Article Abstract

COVID-19 triage protocols are resource allocation processes to deal with the potential lack of resources in Intensive Care Units (ICU). They have given rise to numerous ethical issues and controversies. Among them is the fear that people will be denied access to ICU on the basis of judgments about their quality of life, social value, frailty or age. This online Democratic Deliberation (DD) with members of the public aimed to discover the necessary considerations and conditions that make triage protocols more acceptable to guide future decisions in terms of the values and criteria that must underpin triage protocols. We simultaneously conducted the online DD in Quebec and Ontario on May 28th and June 4th, 2022, among adults who do not work in the healthcare sector, recruited randomly among the members of the public registered on Leger Opinion poll website to favor sociodemographic diversity. Data was analyzed using thematic analysis. Among the participants who took part in the study, 27 participants were from Ontario and 20 from Quebec. Three main themes emerged: 1) Acceptance of the protocol and values, 2) Considerations to be integrated in triage protocols, 3) Conditions which may favor a greater public acceptance of these protocols. Participants supported the idea of prioritizing patients with the best prognosis of survival under extreme conditions. The maximization of benefits was the most predominant approach. Participants considered that triage protocols are necessary to reduce arbitrariness in decision making and to facilitate these tragic decisions by health professionals.

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Source
http://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pmc/articles/PMC11651564PMC
http://journals.plos.org/plosone/article?id=10.1371/journal.pone.0314460PLOS

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