91°”Íűâs says that rationing medical care depending on vaccination status is ethically fraught, but itâs under consideration in parts of America as the global COVID-19 pandemic continues to fill up hospitals and strain limited medical resources.
âItâs brutal,â Peterson said of possibly using vaccination status to decide which patients to admit to the ICU. âBut itâs equally brutal to tell a family of someone whoâs had a heart attack that their loved one canât be admitted because ICUs are full with unvaccinated COVID-19 patients.â
Peterson, an assistant professor of bioethics in the within the , has worked on the ethics of medical resource rationing since the pandemic began. He has conducted s with Mason colleague , advocated for people with disabilities, and informed RAND Corps on triage protocols.
âWeâve moved into a new phase of the pandemicâthe vaccinated versus the unvaccinatedâand ethical challenges are evolving.â
Iowa recently became the first state to announce âcrisis standards of care,â where health care resources are rationed, with Alaska and Montana soon following with similar measures. More parts of the country could be in a similar situation with the winter flu season approaching and the delta variant continuing to spread. Among overwhelmed ICUs, the majority of hospitalizations have been people who are unvaccinated against COVID-19, despite shots being free, safe, and readily available throughout the country.
Caring for unvaccinated COVID-19 patients is taking its toll on the medical field, Peterson said.
âItâs pushing clinical staff beyond the breaking point,â he said. âWeâve already hit the burnout stage. Now my clinical colleagues can only muster the word âhelplessness.â Theyâre trying to help people who wonât help themselves.â
As a result of medical resource shortages, many patients who donât have COVID-19 but still need critical care are being turned away from hospitals.
Peterson cautioned against vaccination status determining who goes to the front of the line.
âClinicians shouldnât be in the position of judging patientsâ behavior,â he said. âThey have a duty to care for patients irrespective of how they ended up in the hospital. We wouldnât turn car accident patients away because they werenât wearing a seatbelt, so why would that be OK with vaccination status? Itâs also hard to tell why people havenât received their shot. Is it because they canât access the shot? Or is it because they have anti-vaccine attitudes? Which reasons are good or bad?â
But even if vaccination status shouldnât play a role in deciding who gets an ICU bed, Peterson suggested that it still might be factored in some part of the calculus. If two patients have equal consideration for ICU admission, but only one is vaccinated, Peterson said vaccination status might be used a âtie breaker.â He also suggested that vaccination status might be used once patients are discharged from the hospital to gauge the cost of their ICU stay. Some companies have insurance premiums on unvaccinated employees.
âFinancially rewarding people for getting the shot might be effective way increase vaccinations and keep people out of the ICU.â