A cross-sectional survey of Australian and New Zealand public opinion on methods totriage intensive care patients in an influenza pandemic

An influenza pandemic has the potential to overwhelm intensive care resources, but the views of the general public on how resources should be allocated in such a scenario were unknown. We aimed to determine Australian and New Zealand public opinion on how intensive care unit beds should be allocated...

Full description

Saved in:
Bibliographic Details
Published inCritical care and resuscitation Vol. 19; no. 3; pp. 254 - 265
Main Authors Cheung, Winston, Myburgh, John, McGuinness, Shay, Chalmers, Debra, Parke, Rachael, Blyth, Fiona, Seppelt, Ian, Parr, Michael, Hooker, Claire, Blackwell, Nikki, DeMonte, Shannon, Gandhi, Kalpesh, Kol, Mark, Kerridge, Ian, Nair, Priya, Saunders, Nicholas M, Saxena, Manoj K, Thanakrishnan, Govindasamy, Naganathan, Vasi
Format Journal Article
LanguageEnglish
Published Australia 01.09.2017
Subjects
Online AccessGet full text

Cover

Loading…
More Information
Summary:An influenza pandemic has the potential to overwhelm intensive care resources, but the views of the general public on how resources should be allocated in such a scenario were unknown. We aimed to determine Australian and New Zealand public opinion on how intensive care unit beds should be allocated during an influenza pandemic. A postal questionnaire was sent to 4000 randomly selected registered voters; 2000 people each from the Australian Electoral Commission and New Zealand Electoral Commission rolls. The respondents' preferred method to triage ICU patients in an influenza pandemic. Respondents chose from six methods: use a "first in, first served" approach; allow a senior doctor to decide; use pre-determined health department criteria; use random selection; use the patient's ability to pay; use the importance of the patient to decide. Respondents also rated each of the triage methods for fairness. Australian respondents preferred that patients be triaged to the ICU either by a senior doctor (43.2%) or by pre-determined health department criteria (38.7%). New Zealand respondents preferred that triage be performed by a senior doctor (45.9%). Respondents from both countries perceived triage by a senior doctor and by pre-determined health department criteria to be fair, and the other four methods of triage to be unfair. In an influenza pandemic, when ICU resources would be overwhelmed, survey respondents preferred that ICU triage be performed by a senior doctor, but also perceived the use of pre-determined triage criteria to be fair.
Bibliography:ObjectType-Article-1
SourceType-Scholarly Journals-1
ObjectType-Feature-2
content type line 23
ISSN:1441-2772