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Erschienen in: Medicine, Health Care and Philosophy 2/2021

04.01.2021 | Scientific Contribution

When do caregivers ignore the veil of ignorance? An empirical study on medical triage decision–making

verfasst von: Azgad Gold, Binyamin Greenberg, Rael Strous, Oren Asman

Erschienen in: Medicine, Health Care and Philosophy | Ausgabe 2/2021

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Abstract

In principle, all patients deserve to receive optimal medical treatment equally. However, in situations in which there is scarcity of time or resources, medical treatment must be prioritized based on a triage. The conventional guidelines of medical triage mandate that treatment should be provided based solely on medical necessity regardless of any non-medical value-oriented considerations (“worst-first”). This study empirically examined the influence of value-oriented considerations on medical triage decision–making. Participants were asked to prioritize medical treatment relating to four case scenarios of an emergency situation resulting from a car collision. The cases differ by situational characteristics pertaining to the at-fault driver, which were related to culpability attribution.
In three case scenarios most participants gave priority to the most severely injured individual, unless the less severely injured individual was their brother. Nevertheless, in the aftermath of a vehicle-ramming terror attack most participants prioritized the less severely injured individual (“victim-first”).
Our findings indicate that when caregivers are presented with concrete highly conflictual triage situations their choices may be based on value-oriented considerations related to contextual characteristics of the emergency situation. Philosophical and practical ramifications of our findings are discussed.
Fußnoten
1
No association was found between participants’ religiosity and the medical treatment priority made by them using a Chi-Square test (all p's > .10).
 
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Metadaten
Titel
When do caregivers ignore the veil of ignorance? An empirical study on medical triage decision–making
verfasst von
Azgad Gold
Binyamin Greenberg
Rael Strous
Oren Asman
Publikationsdatum
04.01.2021
Verlag
Springer Netherlands
Erschienen in
Medicine, Health Care and Philosophy / Ausgabe 2/2021
Print ISSN: 1386-7423
Elektronische ISSN: 1572-8633
DOI
https://doi.org/10.1007/s11019-020-09992-x

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