Texarkana Gazette

We must talk about modern triage

- Andrea Kluth BLOOMBERG VIEW

At some point after he became chief surgeon in Napoleon’s army, Dominique Jean Larrey started walking across blood-soaked battlefiel­ds to pick out those among the wounded who could still be saved, usually by instant amputation of limbs. In time, he developed a system of sorting and separating — trier in French — the casualties. Ignoring rank and nationalit­y, he considered only those who had the greatest chance of surviving. His method became known as triage.

In worst-case scenarios, triage is nowadays accepted almost universall­y as necessary and justified. And yet, the idea still rests on an act of cruelty — cruel both to a victim and to the doctor having to make the decision. It often necessitat­es allowing one human being to die in order to ration the care that might let another live.

The current pandemic is a worst-case scenario. On-andoff for almost two years, doctors and nurses in some places have had to make traumatizi­ng choices about life and death. Sometimes they had too many COVID patients for too few ventilator­s; other times too many with SARS-CoV-2 to be able to treat those dying from cancer or other diseases. Now the omicron variant — which appears to be somewhat milder but much more infectious — threatens to overwhelm hospitals yet again.

Against that backdrop, nine Germans have done us all a favor by starting an overdue debate. They brought a case to the constituti­onal court in Karlsruhe, arguing that during triage situations they risked discrimina­tion, and therefore death. That’s because they suffer from disabiliti­es.

Under existing guidelines in Germany, issued by a medical associatio­n, disabiliti­es should in theory be irrelevant during triage — as is the case with age, sex or ethnicity. The only thing that matters is whether one individual patient in a specific situation with a specific ailment stands a better chance of being saved than another.

In practice, however, doctors under pressure are apt to view the frailties of disabled people as “comorbidit­ies,” and thus relevant. Nancy Poser, one of the plaintiffs, explained the situation this way: If she had a heart attack and showed up in the hospital in her wheelchair, she’d get a worse triage score than a smoker simultaneo­usly arriving with COVID-19. He’d get a bed; she wouldn’t. She “would have to die, exactly that.”

Last week, the judges in Karlsruhe ruled for the plaintiffs by requiring parliament to swiftly pass legislatio­n that will govern the triage decisions to come. Ruling discrimina­tion unconstitu­tional is the easy part, of course. The hard part will be enacting laws that give doctors legal security and simultaneo­usly make sense in the real world, rather than just causing new problems.

As the discussion­s heat up, some pundits are already demanding making triage more fair overall. There’s danger in that goal. We can’t agree on what’s “fair” even in other policy areas, such as taxation, and certainly won’t in this context.

Start with this hottest potato — how doctors should treat unvaccinat­ed patients in triage. Almost nine in 10 of those hospitaliz­ed in Germany with SARS-CoV-2 are people who haven’t had their shots. If they had all been inoculated, intensive care units would never have come under such pressure and there wouldn’t be a need for triage at all.

To some people, this suggests that vaccinated patients, other things being equal, should get dibs, and the unvaccinat­ed should wait for beds.

Any considerat­ion of vaccinatio­n status, like disability, would open Pandora’s box. Just as Larrey didn’t take rank into account, medical staff must never mix quasi-moral judgments into their decisions — that is, how “deserving” a patient may be, based on previous behavior. Otherwise, doctors would set precedents that could in time lead to a new debates about whose life is worth living.

The German parliament and other legislatur­es should therefore clarify that the allocation of scarce medical care must be based solely on the merits of each individual case and the relative likelihood of success, always with the goal of maximizing lives saved. Only medical staff can make these decisions.

But to ensure that even under pressure and ambiguity no discrimina­tion takes place, parliament could require doctors to seek additional and independen­t opinions — perhaps from a medical board that can be contacted around the clock.

That leaves the thorny issue of those unwilling to get vaccinated. Triage is not the place to deal with it. But society is justified in trying to prevent the worst-case scenarios that lead to triage in the first place. Provided shots can be made available to all, democratic­ally elected legislatur­es are therefore well within their rights to mandate vaccinatio­n.

Like every doctor, Dominique Jean Larrey would have preferred to treat every single victim on the battlefiel­d. Our overall goal in policy today must be to keep that option alive — by making triage unnecessar­y wherever possible, so that doctors can care for all patients.

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