Author/Authors :
basu, saurav maulana azad medical college - department of community medicine, new delhi, india
Abstract :
The distribution of scarce critical care resources during
public health emergencies in an ethically justified manner has
been widely acknowledged as a major bioethics concern (1,
2). The Center for Disease Control (CDC) recommends that
critical care allocation during a pandemic emergency should
uphold basic biomedical principles through maintenance of
procedural justice which requires decision-making that is
consistent, impartial, neutral, and nondiscriminatory (3).
During the current COVID-19 pandemic, health systems,
even in developed countries with robust existing health
infrastructure, have experienced sustained demands that have
compelled the rationing of critical medical infrastructure,
especially ventilators and intensive care beds (4, 5).
Conventionally, triage prioritizes medical utility by sorting
and allocating the limited available care to patients based on
their disease severity and favoring those whom the critical
care intervention would give the highest survival chances (6, 7). During a public health emergency such
as a pandemic, the overarching utilitarian goal of achieving the greatest good for the greatest number
usually attains paramountcy. This dominant mainstream ethical view unequivocally advocates
maximizing medical outcomes in terms of either lives saved or life-years gained when allocating scarce
medical resources during pandemics (8, 9). Equity considerations and unresolved concerns pertaining to
social justice are usually deemed secondary and may be disregarded, especially when in conflict with
the utility view. However, Reid has strongly emphasized the need to firmly integrate justice-related
concerns in resource allocation by elevating the ideals related to egalitarianism, non-discrimination and
social justice (10).