allocation of resources philip boyle, ph.d. vice president, ethics

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Allocation of Resources Philip Boyle, Ph.D. Vice President, Ethics www.CHE.ORG/ETHICS

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Page 1: Allocation of Resources Philip Boyle, Ph.D. Vice President, Ethics

Allocation of Resources

Philip Boyle, Ph.D.

Vice President, Ethics

www.CHE.ORG/ETHICS

Page 2: Allocation of Resources Philip Boyle, Ph.D. Vice President, Ethics

Etiquette

• Press * 6 to mute;

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Page 3: Allocation of Resources Philip Boyle, Ph.D. Vice President, Ethics

Under what circumstances is it permissible to allocate, & perhaps deny

healthcare services?

1. What kind of health care services will exist?

2. Who will get them and on what basis?

3. Who will deliver them?

4. How will the burdens of financing be distributed?

5. How shall the power & control of these services be distributed?

Page 4: Allocation of Resources Philip Boyle, Ph.D. Vice President, Ethics

Related questions

• Is perception of the need for limitations accurate?

• Are denials necessary? Defensible?

• Is there a just way to accomplish?

• Where should allocation occur: bedside or nationally?

• Are there procedural safeguards?

Page 5: Allocation of Resources Philip Boyle, Ph.D. Vice President, Ethics

Ways to distribute healthcare• Macro (public policy)

– Eliminate waste– Identify intelligent way to use resources– Public forum –Oregon– Government constraints: (invisible hand)

• Public funds• Restrictions on private funds• Practice of professionals

– Public criteria• Age• Caring versus curing?• Rationing?• Implicit or explicit?

Page 6: Allocation of Resources Philip Boyle, Ph.D. Vice President, Ethics

• Micro (at bedside)– First come, first serve

• presupposes access to info

– Status: based on society’s sympathies– Merit: past & future contribution– Quality of life / prognosis: discriminatory?– Age: natural life span– Lottery: only if all things are equal– Those who can afford it– Alternatives

• Forfeiture • Gate keeping

Page 7: Allocation of Resources Philip Boyle, Ph.D. Vice President, Ethics

Criteria for admission to LTC

• First come, first serve: waiting lists• Neediest first: sickest worse prognosis• Rehabilitation: NH as transition• Merit: previous donor• Family ties: admitting spouse• Maintaining qualitative integrity of institution

– Religion, ethnicity, affiliation with voluntary organization, PLU, quality of life & screamers

• Social responsibility to community• Payment; eligibility for public funds or private

pay

Page 8: Allocation of Resources Philip Boyle, Ph.D. Vice President, Ethics

Resource allocation

• Different names, same problem– Priority setting, rationing, futility judgments,

medically necessary

• Happening all over– Admission/discharge, formulary, capital

purchase, staffing, mix of services

Page 9: Allocation of Resources Philip Boyle, Ph.D. Vice President, Ethics

Resource allocation

• Happenstance or intentional

• Different goals– Cost containment, appropriate care

• Different practical responses– Don’t ask, don’t tell– Tell, but don’t ask– Tell, and ask

Page 10: Allocation of Resources Philip Boyle, Ph.D. Vice President, Ethics

• Where does this question fit in clinical ethics?– When can or must a patient forgo

treatment? When can or must an institution or society forego/deny treatment?

• Who decides?• What basis can you withhold treatment?

– Treatment is futile– Treatment is excessively burdensome with little

benefit

• Organizational ethics

Page 11: Allocation of Resources Philip Boyle, Ph.D. Vice President, Ethics

Case of Rosemary• 80 year old • Assisted living• 3 vessel coronary artery disease• 90% stenosis of left main coronary• Cardiologist recommends medical

management• Would it make a difference if:

– 40 or 60 years old?– Living situation?– Method of payment

Page 12: Allocation of Resources Philip Boyle, Ph.D. Vice President, Ethics

Allocation at beside• Pro

– Always denied a treatment that does more harm than good; better to have MDs in control than outside influence

– Clinicians are moral agents with professional integrity and judgment

– Patients don’t have an unqualified right to request. – Helps the doctor-patient relationship– Must start somewhere; will occur with practice

guidelines– Could cut the cost of any individual

Page 13: Allocation of Resources Philip Boyle, Ph.D. Vice President, Ethics

Allocation at beside

• Con– Applied inconsistently: which pts are

chosen– Challenges the doc-pt relationship– Overrides PT autonomy– Peace dividend? Will the saved resources

be transferred?

Page 14: Allocation of Resources Philip Boyle, Ph.D. Vice President, Ethics

Is this policy or practice?

– Are the definitions clear?– Are the reasons for why some therapies

are withheld?– Is it clear about who should decide?– Are there checks and balances?– Is the resource allocation just applied only

to the vulnerable dying or to all instances?– Is there broad agreement that treatment is

not beneficial or effective?

Page 15: Allocation of Resources Philip Boyle, Ph.D. Vice President, Ethics

Macro allocation

• Oregon– Method

• Research & expert testimony on effectiveness of treatment

• A formula that considered cost and benefit• Public values: 47 community meetings; 12

public hearings; 1000 telephone survey• Commissioners’ judgment of what is most

important to Oregonians

Page 16: Allocation of Resources Philip Boyle, Ph.D. Vice President, Ethics

Oregon

• Listed 709 conditions/treatments

• Developed 17 categories– Essential 1-9– Very Important 10-13– Valuable to certain individuals 14-17

• Acute v. non-acute

• Fatal v. non-fatal

• Effectiveness of outcomes

Page 17: Allocation of Resources Philip Boyle, Ph.D. Vice President, Ethics

Oregon• Every person entitled to services necessary

for diagnosis• 1.Acute fatal: treatment prevents death and

allows for full recovery– Appendectomy, whooping cough

• 2. Maternity care: most newborn disorders• 3.Acute fatal: prevents death but not full

recovery– Non-surgical treatment of stroke, burns, TBI

• 4. Preventive care for children:– Immunizations

Page 18: Allocation of Resources Philip Boyle, Ph.D. Vice President, Ethics

• 5. Chronic fatal: improves life span and quality of life

– Asthma, drug treatment for HIV

• 6. Reproductive services– Infertility services, birth control

• 7. Comfort care– Pain management

• 8. Preventive dental care: exams, cleaning

• 9. Effective preventive care for adults

Page 19: Allocation of Resources Philip Boyle, Ph.D. Vice President, Ethics

Very important

• 10. Acute non-fatal: return to health

• 11. Chronic nonfatal: treatment improves the quality of life– Hip replacement

• 12. Acute non-fatal: treatment but no return to baseline– Dislocated elbow

• 14. Chronic non-fatal : repetitive treatment improves quality of life

Page 20: Allocation of Resources Philip Boyle, Ph.D. Vice President, Ethics

Valuable to certain individuals

• 14. Acute non-fatal: treatment speeds recovery – Viral sore throat

• 15. Infertility services• 16. Less effective preventive care

– Routine screening for those not at risk

• 17. Fatal or non-fatal where treatment causes minimal or no improvement in quality of life– Aggressive end-stage care

Page 21: Allocation of Resources Philip Boyle, Ph.D. Vice President, Ethics

Allocating Resources• Which resources should be managed?• Who should make the decision?• Formal & informal mechanisms?

– Is informal still used?– Are they applied evenly?

• What was the goal of the mechanism? – Whose goals are they?– Does the Goal meet intended end?– Is goal defensible? Goal meet inted end?

Page 22: Allocation of Resources Philip Boyle, Ph.D. Vice President, Ethics

Measurement employed

• Medical or social?

• What unit is measured? Single intervention or episode?

• Effectiveness: effective for what, how long, who judges?

• Severity of illness

• Costs: which should count? Length?

• Social measurements?

Page 23: Allocation of Resources Philip Boyle, Ph.D. Vice President, Ethics

• Due process – notice, in this case information why and

what alternatives exist– means of meaningful appeal– consistency in judgment and action– Correction of bias judgments– transparency to the public and all those

who will affected by the choices– checks & balances

Page 24: Allocation of Resources Philip Boyle, Ph.D. Vice President, Ethics

Conclusion

• Denied services only when shortage, exhaust all options

• Applied uniformly

• Open process free of bias

• Clear who decides

• Appeals process