From Yahoo/WP:
“Hospitals overwhelmed by
covid are turning to 'crisis standards of care.' What does that mean?”
Long-feared rationing of medical
care has become a reality in some parts of the United States as the delta
variant drives a new wave of coronavirus cases, pushing hospitals to the brink.
Idaho last week activated statewide crisis standards of care, in which health
systems can prioritize patients for scarce resources - based largely on their
likelihood of survival - and even deny treatment. The decisions affect covid
and non-covid patients. Some hospitals in Montana and Alaska have turned to
crisis standards as well, while Hawaii's governor this month released health
workers from liability if they have to ration care. Some states have no crisis
standards of care plans, while others just created them during the pandemic.
The common goal: Give health care workers last-resort guidance to make
potentially wrenching decisions. But people disagree on the best calculus. "We
only end up needing crisis standards of care when our other systems have
utterly failed," said Emily Cleveland Manchanda, an assistant professor of
emergency medicine at Boston University School of Medicine.
Q: What do "crisis
standards of care" look like? A: The emergency room at Providence
Alaska Medical Center in Anchorage was so packed recently that patients waited
in their cars for care. Physician Kristen Solana Walkinshaw told The Washington
Post last week that her team had four patients who needed continuous kidney
dialysis and only two machines available. In Idaho, health officials
said, crisis care standards may mean that patients end up treated in hallways or
tents. Elective and urgent surgeries have been delayed at one hospital. There
may be fewer nurses and doctors caring for more people. Patients may wait hours
to get what they need to have to transfer to another hospital far away - though
health leaders caution that neighboring states are struggling with an influx of
coronavirus cases, too. The resource crunch could also force health care
workers to give beds or ventilators to those most likely to recover. If
resources become extremely tight, they can consider universal
do-not-resuscitate orders for hospitalized adult patients who go into cardiac
arrest. "Your care will be affected," Idaho's health
department warned on Facebook. Not all hospitals may need to ration
treatment, but they have a greenlight from authorities. Officials are also
sending a statewide message. "By announcing crisis standards of
care going into effect, you're also in essence saying to your population, if
you're a governor or a public health figure: 'We're in an emergency. Take heed,
take warning,' " said Jacob Appel, an associate professor of psychiatry
and medical education at the Icahn School of Medicine at Mount Sinai in New
York.
Q: How are patients
prioritized? A: Hospitals typically operate on a first come, first served
basis. In a crisis - a hurricane, a mass shooting or a multicar crash, for
example, as well as a pandemic surge - they must triage by prioritizing some
patients over others to save the most lives. Different plans take
different approaches, but there are common themes. Most typically start by
scoring the health of major organs such as the brain, heart, kidney and liver.
They may take into account people's chances of recovery, their life expectancy
and even their "essential worker" status. "Exclusion
criteria" can instruct health care workers to withhold care from certain
groups - patients in cardiac arrest, for instance, or those with severe
dementia. Then others are ranked with scoring systems and sometimes a series of
"tiebreakers." Doctors ask: How badly are patients' organs
failing? Do they have other diseases such as cancer, Alzheimer's, or kidney
damage requiring dialysis? Some plans also give priority to those who are
pregnant, younger people or badly needed health care staff. Patients are
typically evaluated throughout their stay in the hospital to check if their
priority should change. Hawaii's point system takes stock of both short-term
and long-term survival with a rubric that states two values: "Save the
most lives" and "Save the most life-years. "Most state plans say
that the doctor directly c to an
academic review of plans published last year. Some lay out an appeals process.
Q: What parts of the crisis
plans are most controversial? A: Disability rights groups have filed
complaints about crisis standards of care that they argue amount to illegal
discrimination, and others have raised concerns about discrimination against
the elderly. "Using the categories of age to determine whether
someone receives care is wrong. Plain and simple," AARP Idaho State
Director Lupe Wissel wrote in a recent post criticizing Idaho's decision to
make age a "tiebreaker" for limited resources. "The estimation
of potential 'life years' an individual has does not equate to the value of a
life." Scholars also worry that crisis standards of care will feed
into long-standing inequalities in access to health care, because scoring
systems are allocating resources based partly on health conditions that
disproportionately afflict certain groups. Black Americans, for instance, are
much more likely than White Americans to have kidney disease. Some
crisis plans try to counteract these deep-rooted racial disparities:
Massachusetts's scoring system limits penalty points for a history of poor
kidney function, Cleveland Manchanda said. One paper in the medical journal
JAMA Network Open, which examined more than 1,000 patients hospitalized last
year in Miami, found that crisis standards of care policies did not seem to
discriminate based on race or ethnicity. But compensating for societal
inequalities is "nearly impossible," Cleveland Manchanda argued. The
idea of factoring in coronavirus vaccination status has drawn particular
backlash from the public. A critical care task force in Texas floated the
concept last month - but the authors dismissed it as a theoretical exercise
after an uproar.
Q: Where have crisis standards
of care been used? A: Arizona and New Mexico were the only states to
declare crisis standards of care earlier in the pandemic, according to an
August paper published by the National Academy of Medicine. But experts
note there is more to the story. Resources have been rationed without any
official shift to crisis standards. As a winter coronavirus surge
slammed Los Angeles, for instance, ambulance crews were instructed to save
oxygen and to treat patients on the scene rather than bring them to the
hospital when they had little hope of survival. "[Some] areas that
were clearly in crisis related to ventilators, oxygen, or other resources,
where painful triage decisions had to be made, never received a formal
declaration authorizing [crisis standards of care]," the National Academy
of Medicine paper says, attributing the phenomenon in part to "political
concerns." In Arizona and New Mexico, meanwhile, health care
facilities did not apparently end up rationing ventilators despite the state
declarations, the paper said.
Q: Are there any national
guidelines for crisis standards? A: The 2009 H1N1 flu pandemic prompted a
nationwide push to create clear plans for divvying up medical resources in
times of overwhelming need. Federal officials asked the health arm of the
National Academy of Sciences to craft guidelines. But crisis standards
of care vary widely by state. More than half of states had explicit
plans last year, though some of those leave key questions to hospitals,
researchers found. And more than a dozen of those states' crisis standards of
care were crafted or updated in 2020, the researchers wrote. Idaho's policy was
still in the works as the scholars did their survey.Arkansas is finalizing a
covid-19-specific crisis standards of care policy, said Jerrilyn Jones, the state
health department's medical director for the health preparedness and response
branch. The state also wants a more general policy, but Jones noted that those
can take years develop."As with all disaster planning,
people don't really think about the need for such things until it hits you in
the face," she said in an interview. For now, hospitals have their
own plans, Jones said. She said she has not heard of people in Arkansas being
turned away from care, though some places have tried to conserve resources by
halting elective surgeries. The statewide guidance under development
will still leave much of the decision-making to local institutions. Jones
emphasized that each hospital's situation is different. "I don't
think it would be appropriate for us as a state to dictate what is happening at
the bedside," she said.
^ The vast majority of the United
States is now in complete crisis and overwhelmed by Covid and Non-Covid Cases.
That means Patients are being sacrificed (without their consent) and are
needlessly dying. ^
https://www.yahoo.com/news/hospitals-overwhelmed-covid-turning-crisis-141128842.html
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