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Reply #97: Worst Case: Choosing Who Survives in a Flu Epidemic [View All]

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steven johnson Donating Member (1000+ posts) Send PM | Profile | Ignore Sun Oct-25-09 01:16 AM
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97. Worst Case: Choosing Who Survives in a Flu Epidemic
Edited on Sun Oct-25-09 01:17 AM by steven johnson
If the 1918 scenario recurs, we don't have enough ICU ventilators to take care of everyone. Who lives? Who dies? When the polio epidemic first caused respiratory paralysis in the 1950s, physicians hand bagged paralyzed patients in shifts.



In recent years, officials in a host of states and localities, as well as the federal Veterans Health Administration, have been quietly addressing one of medicine's most troubling questions: Who should get a chance to survive when the number of severely ill people far exceeds the resources needed to treat them all?

The draft plans vary. In some states, patients with Do Not Resuscitate orders, the elderly, those requiring dialysis, or those with severe neurological impairment would be refused ventilators, or admission to hospitals. Utah divides epidemics into phases (pdf). Initially, hospitals would apply triage rules to residents of mental institutions, nursing homes, prisons and facilities for the "handicapped." If an epidemic worsened, the rules would apply to the general population.

Federal officials say the possibility that America's already crowded intensive care units would be overwhelmed in the coming weeks by flu patients is small but they remain vigilant.

Mary Buckley-Davis, a respiratory therapist with 30 years experience, wrote to officials in 2007 that "there will be rioting in the streets" if hospitals begin disconnecting ventilators. "There won't be enough public relations spin or appropriate media coverage in the world" to calm the family of a patient "terminally weaned" from a ventilator, she said.

Worst Case: Choosing Who Survives in a Flu Epidemic
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