MDM Policy & Practice (Jul 2022)

Polarized Citizen Preferences for the Ethical Allocation of Scarce Medical Resources in 20 Countries

  • Edmond Awad,
  • Bence Bago,
  • Jean-François Bonnefon,
  • Nicholas A. Christakis,
  • Iyad Rahwan,
  • Azim Shariff

DOI
https://doi.org/10.1177/23814683221113573
Journal volume & issue
Vol. 7

Abstract

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Objective. When medical resources are scarce, clinicians must make difficult triage decisions. When these decisions affect public trust and morale, as was the case during the COVID-19 pandemic, experts will benefit from knowing which triage metrics have citizen support. Design. We conducted an online survey in 20 countries, comparing support for 5 common metrics (prognosis, age, quality of life, past and future contribution as a health care worker) to a benchmark consisting of support for 2 no-triage mechanisms (first-come-first-served and random allocation). Results. We surveyed nationally representative samples of 1000 citizens in each of Brazil, France, Japan, and the United States and also self-selected samples from 20 countries (total N = 7599) obtained through a citizen science website (the Moral Machine). We computed the support for each metric by comparing its usability to the usability of the 2 no-triage mechanisms. We further analyzed the polarizing nature of each metric by considering its usability among participants who had a preference for no triage. In all countries, preferences were polarized, with the 2 largest groups preferring either no triage or extensive triage using all metrics. Prognosis was the least controversial metric. There was little support for giving priority to healthcare workers. Conclusions. It will be difficult to define triage guidelines that elicit public trust and approval. Given the importance of prognosis in triage protocols, it is reassuring that it is the least controversial metric. Experts will need to prepare strong arguments for other metrics if they wish to preserve public trust and morale during health crises. Highlights We collected citizen preferences regarding triage decisions about scarce medical resources from 20 countries. We find that citizen preferences are universally polarized. Citizens either prefer no triage (random allocation or first-come-first served) or extensive triage using all common triage metrics, with “prognosis” being the least controversial. Experts will need to prepare strong arguments to preserve or elicit public trust in triage decisions.