JPHMP Direct

When the Going Gets Tough, the Tough Must Be Ethical

Meditations on the MPH

I have a confession to make. I sometimes publish papers in journals other than JPHMP. I know, for shame.

One of these papers is on Crisis Standards of Care, and was recently made freely available as a COVID-19 resource from the American Journal of Public Health. The premise of this manuscript is that it is a follow-on to the 2012 Institute of Medicine report on Crisis Standards of Care (CSC), focusing especially on the ethical considerations around CSC. A CSC framework acknowledges that there will be times when normal operations aren’t possible due to resource and other constraint or limitations. It is clear that some localities are now here, some have been for a while, and many of the rest of the states and counties in the US may follow – especially if strict social distancing is not implemented. And maintained. There are a lot of great and important planning tools out there, many of which were developed years ago, and more in development.

In my view, a CSC plan is not just about the science of how you respond to this disease, or how you triage patients, but the moral justifications and approaches to doing so. In the state of Minnesota, I was fortunate to support the efforts of the Minnesota Pandemic Ethics Project, which created an ethics framework to respond to a pandemic. This was waaaaay back when the world was worried about Bird Flu. It was informed by expert and community stakeholder input, and the project team took the plan out to Minnesotans for feedback. This guidance was updated and operationalized in recent years in the Minnesota Crisis Standards of Care Ethical Considerations plan.

So why am I talking about a paper from another journal, and one that’s about ethics? Frankly, because even though things could get much, much worse if we don’t maintain good social distancing approaches, allocating scarce resources like ventilators or ECMO is going to be challenging regardless -– and it sounds like many folks are already there. In this paper, after reviewing dozens of articles and state plans (though the latter was not part of the published manuscript, but you can see them here), we made a few recommendations –- which I think bear repeating. I just wanted to quickly share something from this paper with JPHMP Direct readership; I hope it can be useful in the hard work ahead.

Issues that need to be addressed in ethical frameworks/guidance for CSC:

STATE UNDERLYING JUSTIFICATIONS AND NORMS FOR CSC

CONSIDER BOTH BROAD AND SPECIFIC ETHICAL ISSUES BY SCENARIO

ESTABLISH EXPECTATIONS OF DUTY TO CARE AND RECIPROCITY

SELECT CRITERIA TO USE IN RESOURCE ALLOCATION PRIORITY-SETTING

INTEGRATE ETHICAL AND TECHNICAL CONSIDERATIONS IN CSC PLANS

Source and copyright: Leider et al, American Journal of Public Health

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About the Author

JP Leider
Jonathon P. (JP) Leider, PhD, is an independent consultant in the public health and health policy space, as well as a Senior Lecturer at the University of Minnesota and Associate Faculty at the Johns Hopkins Bloomberg School of Public Health. He has active projects and collaborations with foundations, national public health organizations, public health researchers and academics, and public health practitioners. His current projects focus on public health systems, the public health workforce, and public health finance. He holds a PhD in Health Policy and Management from the Johns Hopkins Bloomberg School of Public Health.
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