Prioritisation of ICU treatments for critically ill patients in a COVID-19 pandemic with scarce resources | Journal Pre-proof
Zotero / K4D COVID-19 Health Evidence Summaries Group / Top-Level Items 2020-07-05
Type
Journal Article
Author
Thomas Leclerc
Author
Nicolas Donat
Author
Alexis Donat
Author
Pierre Pasquier
Author
Nicolas Libert
Author
Elodie Schaeffer
Author
Erwan D’Aranda
Author
Jean Cotte
Author
Bruno Fontaine
Author
Pierre-François Perrigault
Author
Fabrice Michel
Author
Laurent Muller
Author
Eric Meaudre
Author
Benoît Veber
URL
http://www.sciencedirect.com/science/article/pii/S2352556820300916
Publication
Anaesthesia Critical Care & Pain Medicine
ISSN
2352-5568
Date
17/05/2020
Journal Abbr
Anaesthesia Critical Care & Pain Medicine
DOI
10.1016/j.accpm.2020.05.008
Accessed
2020-07-05 13:22:57
Library Catalog
ScienceDirect
Language
en
Abstract
Background
Relying on capacity increases and patient transfers to deal with the huge and continuous inflow of COVID-19 critically ill patients is a strategy limited by finite human and logistical resources.
Rationale
Prioritising both critical care initiation and continuation is paramount to save the greatest number of lives. It enables to allocate scarce resources in priority to those with the highest probability of benefiting from them. It is fully ethical provided it relies on objective and widely shared criteria, thus preventing arbitrary decisions and guaranteeing equity. Prioritisation seeks to fairly allocate treatments, maximise saved lives, gain indirect life benefits from prioritising exposed healthcare and similar workers, give priority to those most penalised as a last resort, and apply similar prioritisation schemes to all patients.
Prioritisation strategy
Prioritisation schemes and their criteria are adjusted to the level of resource scarcity: strain (level A) or saturation (level B). Prioritisation yields a four level priority for initiation or continuation of critical care: P1–high priority, P2–intermediate priority, P3–not needed, P4–not appropriate. Prioritisation schemes take into account the patient's wishes, clinical frailty, pre-existing chronic condition, along with severity and evolution of acute condition. Initial priority level must be reassessed, at least after 48h once missing decision elements are available, at the typical turning point in the disease's natural history (ICU days 7 to 10 for COVID-19), and each time resource scarcity levels change. For treatments to be withheld or withdrawn, a collegial decision-making process and information of patient and/or next of kin are paramount.
Perspective
Prioritisation strategy is bound to evolve with new knowledge and with changes within the epidemiological situation.