Abstract

This article provides a critical comparative analysis of the substantive and procedural values and ethical concepts articulated in guidelines for allocating scarce resources in the COVID-19 pandemic. We identified 21 local and national guidelines written in English, Spanish, German and French; applicable to specific and identifiable jurisdictions; and providing guidance to clinicians for decision making when allocating critical care resources during the COVID-19 pandemic. US guidelines were not included, as these had recently been reviewed elsewhere. Information was extracted from each guideline on: 1) the development process; 2) the presence and nature of ethical, medical and social criteria for allocating critical care resources; and 3) the membership of and decision-making procedure of any triage committees. Results of our analysis show the majority appealed primarily to consequentialist reasoning in making allocation decisions, tempered by a largely pluralistic approach to other substantive and procedural values and ethical concepts. Medical and social criteria included medical need, co-morbidities, prognosis, age, disability and other factors, with a focus on seemingly objective medical criteria. There was little or no guidance on how to reconcile competing criteria, and little attention to internal contradictions within individual guidelines. Our analysis reveals the challenges in developing sound ethical guidance for allocating scarce medical resources, highlighting problems in operationalising ethical concepts and principles, divergence between guidelines, unresolved contradictions within the same guideline, and use of naïve objectivism in employing widely used medical criteria for allocating ICU resources.

Highlights

  • The pandemic spread of SARS-CoV2 from late 2019 led to many countries experiencing high demand for acute and critical care in 2020 [1]

  • The requirement for a decision-making framework was included because the focus of this study is to identify which ethical concepts underpin decisions and how these are operationalized, rather than general guidance

  • Most guidelines are available in English (n = 14), with the remainder published in German (n = 3), French (n = 2) or Spanish (n = 2)

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Summary

Introduction

The pandemic spread of SARS-CoV2 from late 2019 led to many countries experiencing high demand for acute and critical care in 2020 [1]. In non-emergency conditions in high-income countries with accessible healthcare systems, decisions about ICU care are usually made by ICU specialists in consultation with the patient and/ or relevant decision makers including family and friends. These decisions take account of the patient’s condition and prognosis as well as their preferences about the nature and extent of care they would like, with the proviso that patients do not usually have a right to demand non-beneficial ICU care. Issues of distributive justice in access to ICU beds rarely arise at the level of individual patient care in high-income countries, as there is normally sufficient capacity to meet need

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