Ethics Crisis Standards of Care Simulation

被引:0
|
作者
Switzer, Diane Fuller [1 ,2 ]
Knowles, Suzan Griffis [2 ]
机构
[1] Seattle Univ, Coll Nursing, Initiat Eth & Transformat Technol, Seattle, WA USA
[2] Seattle Univ, Coll Nursing, Seattle, WA 98122 USA
关键词
Adult-Gerontology Acute Care Nurse Practitioner; crisis standards of care; ethics; implicit bias; simulation; NURSING-EDUCATION; DECISION-MAKING; CONTINGENCY; TOOL; PRACTICE(TM); MORTALITY; SCORE;
D O I
10.1097/TME.0000000000000498
中图分类号
R47 [护理学];
学科分类号
1011 ;
摘要
Ethical dilemmas exist with decision-making regarding resource allocations, such as critical care, ventilators and other critical equipment, and pharmaceuticals during pandemics. Triage artificial intelligence (AI) algorithms based on prognostication tools exist to guide these decisions; however, implicit bias may affect the decision-making process leading to deviation from the algorithm recommendations. Conflict within the ethical domain may be affected as well. A knowledge gap was identified within the Adult-Gerontology Acute Care Nurse Practitioner (AG-ACNP) curriculum regarding ethics in crisis standards of care (CSC) medical decision-making. Incorporating a CSC simulation looked to address this knowledge gap. A simulation-based learning (SBL) experience was designed as a critical access setting where CSC are in place and three diverse, medically complex patients in need of critical care present to the hospital where one critical care bed remains open. Given the complexity of the simulation scenario, a table-top pilot test was selected. Three AG-ACNP fourth-quarter students in their critical care rotation volunteered for the pilot test. Students were provided with the topic, "ethics crisis standards of care" and the article, "A catalogue of tools and variables from crisis and routine care to support decision-making during pandemics" by M. Cardona et al. (2021), to read in advance. Students were provided with the triage AI algorithm (M. Cardona et al., 2021) utilizing prognostication tools to prioritize which patient requires the critical care bed. The expectation was that implicit bias would enter the decision-making process, causing deviation from the triage AI algorithm and moral distress. The debriefing session revealed that students deviated from the triage AI algorithm, experienced implicit bias, moral distress, and utilized clinical judgment and experience to care for all three patients. The pilot test results support that a CSC SBL experience addresses a critical knowledge gap in AG-ACNP education and an SBL experience incorporating ethical decision-making curriculum with standardized patients should be developed and trialed as the next step.
引用
收藏
页码:71 / 81
页数:11
相关论文
共 50 条
  • [41] COVID-19, ethics of care and feminist crisis management
    Branicki, Layla J.
    GENDER WORK AND ORGANIZATION, 2020, 27 (05): : 872 - 883
  • [42] Colorado Palliative Care and Hospice Crisis Standards: Moving Beyond Critical Care Planning
    Abbott, Jean
    Ferraro, Kelly
    Johnson, Daniel
    Statland, Barbara
    Massone, John
    Fowler, Carol
    Budai, Peggy
    Cantrill, Stephen V.
    JOURNAL OF PAIN AND SYMPTOM MANAGEMENT, 2021, 61 (06) : 1287 - 1296
  • [43] Ethics in Pastoral Care and Counseling: A Contemporary Review of Updated Standards in the Field
    Eliason, Grafton Todd
    Lepore, Mark
    Holmes, Douglas
    JOURNAL OF PASTORAL CARE & COUNSELING, 2013, 67 (02)
  • [44] BUSINESS VS MEDICAL-ETHICS - CONFLICTING STANDARDS FOR MANAGED CARE
    MARINER, WK
    JOURNAL OF LAW MEDICINE & ETHICS, 1995, 23 (03): : 236 - 246
  • [45] Barriers standards of professional ethics in clinical care from the perspective of nurses
    Tayebi, Naeimeh
    Omidi, Ali
    Chahkhoei, Meysam
    Mahani, Zadeh Maryam Askary
    Najafi, Kazem
    Aliravari, Hossein
    Haghshenas, Aboutaleb
    REVISTA LATINOAMERICANA DE HIPERTENSION, 2019, 14 (03): : 265 - +
  • [46] Extracorporeal Membrane Oxygenation for Coronavirus Disease 2019: Crisis Standards of Care
    Agerstrand, Cara
    Dubois, Richard
    Takeda, Koji
    Uriel, Nir
    Lemaitre, Philippe
    Fried, Justin
    Masoumi, Amirali
    Cheung, Eva W.
    Kaku, Yuji
    Witer, Lucas
    Liou, Peter
    Gerall, Claire
    Klein-Cloud, Rafael
    Abrams, Darryl
    Cunningham, Jennifer
    Madahar, Purnema
    Parekh, Madhavi
    Short, Briana
    Yip, Natalie H.
    Serra, Alexis
    Beck, James
    Brewer, Michael
    Fung, Kenmund
    Mullin, Dana
    Oommen, Roy
    Stanifer, Bryan Payne
    Middlesworth, William
    Sonett, Joshua
    Brodie, Daniel
    ASAIO JOURNAL, 2021, 67 (03) : 245 - 249
  • [47] Burn Surge Capacity: Recognizing the Catastrophe Phase in Crisis Standards of Care
    Kearns, Randy D.
    Bettencourt, Amanda P.
    Hickerson, William L.
    Palmieri, Tina L.
    Biddinger, Paul D.
    Ryan, Colleen M.
    Jeng, James C.
    JOURNAL OF BURN CARE & RESEARCH, 2024, 45 (03): : 539 - 540
  • [48] The Lifeboat at World's End moving beyond crisis standards of care
    Black, James E.
    PERSPECTIVES IN BIOLOGY AND MEDICINE, 2022, 65 (04) : 559 - 568
  • [49] Allocating scarce cardiovascular support in a pandemic: ECMO in crisis standards of care
    Zaidi, Danish
    Fedson, Savitri E.
    Kirkpatrick, James N.
    HEART, 2022, 108 (04) : 321 - 323
  • [50] Crisis Standards of Care-More Than Just a Thought Experiment?
    Mehta, Anuj B.
    Wynia, Matthew K.
    HASTINGS CENTER REPORT, 2021, 51 (05) : 53 - 55