The current outbreak of SARS-CoV-2 has and continues to put huge pressure on intensive care units (ICUs) worldwide. Many patients with COVID-19 require some form of respiratory support and often have prolonged ICU stays, which results in a critical shortage of ICU beds. It is therefore not always physically possible to treat all the patients who require intensive care, raising major ethical dilemmas related to which patients should benefit from the limited resources and which should not. Here we consider some of the approaches to the acute shortages seen during this and other epidemics, including some guidelines for triaging ICU admissions and treatments.
Yaseen M. Arabi, Élie Azoulay, Hasan M. Al‐Dorzi, Jason Phua, Jorge I. Salluh, Alexandra Binnie, Carol Hodgson, Derek C. Angus, Maurizio Cecconi, Bin Du, Rob Fowler, Charles D. Gomersall, Peter Horby, Nicole P. Juffermans, Jozef Kesecioğlu, Ruth Kleinpell, F.S. Machado, Greg S. Martin, Geert Meyfroidt, Andrew Rhodes, Kathy Rowan, Jean‐François Timsit, Jean Louis Vincent, Giuseppe Citerio
Elisa Gouvêa Bogossian, Fabio Silvio Taccone, Antonio Izzi, Nicolas Yin, Alessandra Garufi, Stéphane Hublet, Hassane Njimi, Amédée Ego, Julie Gorham, B. Byl, Alexandre Brasseur, Maya Hites, Jean Louis Vincent, Jacques Créteur, David Grimaldi
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