流行病条件下社区和文化对稀缺医疗资源伦理配置的影响:协商民主研究。

Q2 Medicine Journal of Participatory Medicine Pub Date : 2020-03-30 DOI:10.2196/18272
Monica Schoch-Spana, Emily K Brunson, Howard Gwon, Alan Regenberg, Eric S Toner, Elizabeth L Daugherty-Biddison
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引用次数: 17

摘要

背景:在大流行情况下预计的卫生需求与卫生保健和医疗对策系统的现有能力之间存在明显差距。现有的流行病伦理讨论主张让公众参与短缺困境,并关注影响应对全球健康威胁的当地情况和文化观点。因此,这项公众参与研究考虑了社区和文化在流感大流行期间稀缺卫生资源(特别是呼吸机)的道德分配中的作用。它建立在先前对马里兰州居民关于如何在严重的全球流感爆发期间分配有限的机械呼吸机供应的价值观和偏好的探索之上。这项早期研究的一个重要发现是,当地的历史和国家内部的位置产生了对稀缺的不同思考方式。目的:考虑到马里兰州参与者表达的主题在州内的差异,项目团队试图通过在其他地方实施相同的协议来检查州际差异,以回答以下问题。在美国不同地区是否存在道德参照系的差异?相同和差异的证据对地方和国家层面的流行病规划人员和决策者具有什么实际意义?方法:2018年3月,在德克萨斯州中部对30名不同的参与者进行了与马里兰州研究相同的协商民主程序的研究,其中一半被认定为西班牙裔或拉丁裔。协商民主提供了一个适度的过程,通过这个过程,社区成员可以从专家那里了解有关公共政策问题的事实,并探讨自己和他人的观点。结果:与会者建议,通过均匀分配呼吸机供应并始终适用明确的资格标准,卫生当局可以公平分配稀缺的救生设备。个人对其核心家庭和大家庭的强烈认同、依恋和义务成为一种独特的区域和民族核心价值,对分配框架的实质、管理和沟通具有实际意义。结论:马里兰州和德克萨斯州中部的居民对分配决定的公平性表达了共同的、压倒一切的关切。然而,德州中部的法官更倾向于将家庭作为核心考虑因素。在德克萨斯州中部,家庭是一个主要的、受文化影响的镜头,人们经常通过它来看待生死问题。在美国,与大流行病有关的其他公众参与活动的召集人提倡在制定合乎道德的分配框架方面具有透明度和包容性的好处;这项研究表明,文化能力是一个进一步的优势。
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Influence of Community and Culture in the Ethical Allocation of Scarce Medical Resources in a Pandemic Situation: Deliberative Democracy Study.

Background: Stark gaps exist between projected health needs in a pandemic situation and the current capacity of health care and medical countermeasure systems. Existing pandemic ethics discussions have advocated to engage the public in scarcity dilemmas and attend the local contexts and cultural perspectives that shape responses to a global health threat. This public engagement study thus considers the role of community and culture in the ethical apportionment of scarce health resources, specifically ventilators, during an influenza pandemic. It builds upon a previous exploration of the values and preferences of Maryland residents regarding how a finite supply of mechanical ventilators ought to be allocated during a severe global outbreak of influenza. An important finding of this earlier research was that local history and place within the state engendered different ways of thinking about scarcity.

Objective: Given the intrastate variation in the themes expressed by Maryland participants, the project team sought to examine interstate differences by implementing the same protocol elsewhere to answer the following questions. Does variation in ethical frames of reference exist within different regions of the United States? What practical implications does evidence of sameness and difference possess for pandemic planners and policymakers at local and national levels?

Methods: Research using the same deliberative democracy process from the Maryland study was conducted in Central Texas in March 2018 among 30 diverse participants, half of whom identified as Hispanic or Latino. Deliberative democracy provides a moderated process through which community members can learn facts about a public policy matter from experts and explore their own and others' views.

Results: Participants proposed that by evenly distributing supplies of ventilators and applying clear eligibility criteria consistently, health authorities could enable fair allocation of scarce lifesaving equipment. The strong identification, attachment, and obligation of persons toward their nuclear and extended families emerged as a distinctive regional and ethnic core value that has practical implications for the substance, administration, and communication of allocation frameworks.

Conclusions: Maryland and Central Texas residents expressed a common, overriding concern about the fairness of allocation decisions. Central Texas deliberants, however, more readily expounded upon family as a central consideration. In Central Texas, family is a principal, culturally inflected lens through which life and death matters are often viewed. Conveners of other pandemic-related public engagement exercises in the United States have advocated the benefits of transparency and inclusivity in developing an ethical allocation framework; this study demonstrates cultural competence as a further advantage.

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来源期刊
Journal of Participatory Medicine
Journal of Participatory Medicine Medicine-Medicine (miscellaneous)
CiteScore
3.20
自引率
0.00%
发文量
8
审稿时长
12 weeks
期刊最新文献
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