From Disability Scoop:
“States Pressured To Remove
Disability Bias From Medical Care Guidelines”
In what’s being called a national
precedent, yet another state is agreeing to change its approach to providing
medical care during the pandemic in order to prevent disability discrimination.
The U.S Department of Health and Human Services’ Office for Civil Rights said
Thursday that it has reached a resolution with the state of Utah to revise its
crisis standards of care guidelines. At issue is the state’s plan to ration
care in the event that ventilators or other resources are in short supply, an
issue that’s come to the fore amid the coronavirus pandemic. Disability
advocacy groups have filed complaints against nearly a dozen states alleging
that such plans discriminate against people with disabilities. In the case of
Utah, the state has altered its plan so that medical providers must conduct an
individual assessment rather than making decisions based on age, disability or
functional impairment. Language allowing a person’s long-term life expectancy
to be factored has been removed and providers can no longer consider resource
intensity or duration of need as criteria for a person to receive medical
resources. In addition, under the updated policy, hospitals should not
reallocate personal ventilators that people with disabilities have brought with
them.
Most significantly, advocates
noted that Utah will not allow blanket “do not resuscitate” policies if
resources are scarce and the state is including protections to keep providers
from steering people into decisions to withhold life-sustaining treatment. “We’ve
been pleased by the cooperation of states we have approached with civil rights
concerns regarding their policies and Utah’s plan is the best yet,” said Roger
Severino, director of the HHS Office for Civil Rights. “Older persons and
persons with disabilities have equal worth and dignity and should not be
deprioritized for health care based on stereotypes and other impermissible
factors.” The HHS Office for Civil Rights previously resolved complaints
against Tennessee, Pennsylvania and Alabama regarding crisis standards of care
guidelines. “Today’s resolution sends a clear message during a dire time:
people with disabilities must have equal access to life-saving treatment during
the COVID-19 pandemic,” said Alison Barkoff, director of advocacy at the Center
for Public Representation, one of the groups that brought the complaints
against Utah and other states. “Many states’ medical rationing plans have
discriminatory provisions similar to those in Utah. We urge states across the
country to heed this warning and revise their plans now to comply with federal
disability laws.”
^ While I’m glad to see another State
remove this Disability Bias from his Healthcare it’s a sad fact that it remains
for the vast majority of States. ^
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