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46 - Triage in civilian mass casualty situations

from 6 - Anesthesiologists, the state, and society

Published online by Cambridge University Press:  05 March 2012

Gail A. Van Norman
Affiliation:
University of Washington
Stephen Jackson
Affiliation:
Good Samaritan Hospital, San Jose
Stanley H. Rosenbaum
Affiliation:
Yale University School of Medicine
Susan K. Palmer
Affiliation:
Oregon Anesthesiology Group
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Summary

General principles of civilian triage should be familiar to all physicians. Isolated instances of mass casualties can happen in a region with only one small hospital, and any physician may be called upon to act as a triage officer. Combat triage principles do not appropriately address civilian mass casualty situations in which survival, not combat-readiness, is the main goal of medical treatment. The goals of combat medicine are to return the greatest number of soldiers to combat, and then to preserve life. Social worth may be applicable in very limited interpretations, when the particular skills of the individual are critical to managing the disaster itself. Lifeboat ethics may lead to decisions to reallocate resources away from existing hospital patients in order to provide capacity to treat disaster victims. Triage should be based on ethically sound principles, be transparent, include public input, and be developed before disaster strikes.
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Clinical Ethics in Anesthesiology
A Case-Based Textbook
, pp. 270 - 274
Publisher: Cambridge University Press
Print publication year: 2010

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