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Using Lifesaving Drugs as a Means of Redistribution
Townhall.com ^ | July 29, 2020 | Betsy McCaughy

Posted on 07/29/2020 10:49:15 AM PDT by Kaslin

When lifesaving drugs run low, hospitals have to choose which patients get a scarce drug, while others go without. Some even die. Historically, medical ethicists have recommended giving the drug to the patient most likely to benefit or using a lottery to give every patient an equal chance.

Not any more. Pennsylvania hospitals are tilting the scale in favor of patients from "disadvantaged areas." If you're middle class, you're toast.

To "redress social injustices," Pennsylvania is applying a "weighted lottery" statewide, to hike the odds that the scarce drug remdesivir for COVID-19 will be given to patients from poor neighborhoods in preference to other patients.

Remdesivir is a medicine that speeds recovery and, according to its maker, Gilead Sciences, increases survival by 62%.

If you can get it. Your ZIP code could literally mean the difference between life and death.

"This is all very new," explains Douglas White, an ethicist at the University of Pittsburgh, who helped devise the weighted lottery.

Some medical ethicists are urging that other states follow suit. South Carolina reports that if remdesivir runs short there, the state will apply preferences like UPMC's lottery, according to Dee Ford, professor at the Medical University of South Carolina who helped design the South Carolina approach.

The public needs to speak out before this deadly scheme comes to their state.

In the past, if many patients needed a scarce drug, deciding who got it involved only their medical conditions. That's consistent with the American Medical Association guidelines -- that the patient most likely to benefit medically from the drug should get it.

It's a far cry from favoring patients from low-income ZIP codes.

The Greenwall Foundation, a medical ethics group, advocates "mitigating health disparities" by prioritizing who gets remdesivir and future COVID-19 therapeutics. So do researchers at the University of California, San Francisco.

This isn't just about remdesivir. Giving medical preferences to the economically disadvantaged is gaining steam. The Organ Procurement and Transplantation Network floated a proposal in January to require transplant candidates to provide household income on their applications, as a first step toward increasing the number of transplants offered to patients with low "socioeconomic status." It's provoked considerable controversy from other transplant advocacy groups.

Academics are using the pandemic as a launching pad to push their redistributionist agenda. But it's not what the public believes is morally right. A majority of people say a hospital's goals should be saving the most lives and treating people equally, according to a June 2020 poll.

Many physicians agree. Downstate Medical Center cardiologist Jeffrey Borer says, "a means test in either direction is unethical."

New York has so few COVID-19 hospitalized patients that it recently sent remdesivir to Florida. Texas is reserving its supply for patients not yet on ventilators. Minnesota emphatically rejects socioeconomic preferences.

Most states are not rigging the system -- yet. But it's likely to spread fast if left up to university medical ethicists, who are trying to keep it quiet. Families won't know if their ZIP code had something to do with why Dad died in the ICU.

The Pennsylvania lottery's designers say they were inspired by a weighted lottery for oversubscribed charter schools that gave preferences based on address.

That should be a warning. Preferential admissions have roiled the nation. Preferential treatment in hospitals, where it could determine who survives, would be even more divisive.

On the other hand, it's common sense that when a COVID-19 vaccine becomes available, it should be distributed to disadvantaged neighborhoods first to prevent the most cases. Residents, there are more likely to live in crowded conditions, unable to socially distance, and to work on jobs in mass transit and grocery stores that expose them to the disease.

But caring for hospital patients is a different matter. Equal treatment is the only morally acceptable rule.

Patients need to trust that their caregivers are doing all they can. The ICU is no place for social engineering. Preferential treatment there is frightening. The public needs to stop it now.


TOPICS: Culture/Society; Editorial
KEYWORDS:

1 posted on 07/29/2020 10:49:15 AM PDT by Kaslin
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To: Kaslin

Yes. Kill the able-bodied who produce the wealth in favor of the takers.

Our society is committing suicide.


2 posted on 07/29/2020 10:52:21 AM PDT by Seruzawa (TANSTAAFL!)
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To: Kaslin

Another reason for marginalizing the plentiful and cheap HCQ emerges.......


3 posted on 07/29/2020 10:52:29 AM PDT by Lurkinanloomin (Natural Born Citizens Are Born Here of Citizen Parents|Know Islam, No Peace-No Islam, Know Peace)
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To: Seruzawa

Our society is not committing suicide, it’s being murdered by leftists.


4 posted on 07/29/2020 10:53:20 AM PDT by Lurkinanloomin (Natural Born Citizens Are Born Here of Citizen Parents|Know Islam, No Peace-No Islam, Know Peace)
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To: Kaslin

I see...reverse discrimination is okay, just like it is for the quotas we see in colleges and universities. This PC-ness is suicidal.


5 posted on 07/29/2020 10:56:03 AM PDT by econjack
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To: Kaslin

How the Hell is this happening in South Carolina?


6 posted on 07/29/2020 11:03:36 AM PDT by cmj328 (We live here.)
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To: Kaslin

you can thank obamamcare for this mentality

they put it into law that skin color and racial quotas would affect treatments of parients


7 posted on 07/29/2020 11:27:19 AM PDT by Secret Agent Man (Gone Galt; Not Averse to Going Bronson.)
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To: Kaslin

What happens if the suburban women (who we are assured will determine the outcome of this election) get wind of this?


8 posted on 07/29/2020 11:30:57 AM PDT by absalom01 (You should do your duty in all things. You cannot do more, and you should never wish to do less.)
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To: Kaslin
Say it together, America!

I want my HCQ!   Not because it works, because it pisses off the totalitarian left!

9 posted on 07/29/2020 11:38:58 AM PDT by IncPen ("Inside of every progressive is a Totalitarian screaming to get out" ~ David Horowitz)
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To: Kaslin

bkmk


10 posted on 07/29/2020 11:40:07 AM PDT by Sergio (An object at rest cannot be stopped! - The Evil Midnight Bomber What Bombs at Midnight)
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