Chest
Volume 159, Issue 6, June 2021, Pages 2494-2502
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Humanities: Original Research
Allocation of Mechanical Ventilators During a Pandemic: A Mixed-Methods Study of Perceptions Among Japanese Health Care Workers and the General Public

https://doi.org/10.1016/j.chest.2021.01.015Get rights and content
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Background

In Japan, public dialogue on allocation of life-saving medical resources remains taboo, and discussion largely has been avoided.

Research Question

Do Japanese health care workers and the general public agree with principles of ventilator allocation developed internationally?

Study Design and Methods

A four-point Likert scale questionnaire was used to assess the extent of agreement or disagreement with internationally developed triage principles for rationing mechanical ventilators during pandemics. Questionnaires were distributed in person or online, and generalized linear models were used to analyze quantitative data. Free-text descriptions were analyzed qualitatively, both deductively and inductively, to compare respondent opinions with those described in previous US studies.

Results

Of 3,191 surveys distributed, 1,520 were returned. Allocation of resources to maximize survival from current illness (“save the most lives”) was the most popular triage principle, with 95.8% of respondents in agreement. Allocation to ensure a minimum duration of benefit, as determined by predicted prognosis after illness (“ensure minimum duration of benefit”), and allocation to persons who have experienced fewer life stages (“life cycle”) obtained agreement of 82.2% and 80.1%, respectively. Withdrawal and reallocation of mechanical ventilators to more appropriate patients was supported by 64.4% of respondents. Only 28.4% of respondents supported the principle of first-come, first-served access to ventilators.

Interpretation

Most respondents supported allocation principles developed internationally and disagreed with the idea of first-come, first-served allocation during resource shortages. The Japanese public seems largely to be prepared to discuss the ethical dilemmas and possible solutions regarding fair and transparent allocation of critical care resources as a necessary step in confronting present and future pandemics and disasters.

Key Words

allocation of mechanical ventilators
COVID-19
pandemic
public perception

Abbreviations

COVID-19
coronavirus disease 2019

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FUNDING/SUPPORT: The authors have reported to CHEST that no funding was received for this study.