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Published in: BMC Health Services Research 1/2004

Open Access 01-12-2004 | Research article

SARS and hospital priority setting: a qualitative case study and evaluation

Authors: Jennifer AH Bell, Sylvia Hyland, Tania DePellegrin, Ross EG Upshur, Mark Bernstein, Douglas K Martin

Published in: BMC Health Services Research | Issue 1/2004

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Abstract

Background

Priority setting is one of the most difficult issues facing hospitals because of funding restrictions and changing patient need. A deadly communicable disease outbreak, such as the Severe Acute Respiratory Syndrome (SARS) in Toronto in 2003, amplifies the difficulties of hospital priority setting. The purpose of this study is to describe and evaluate priority setting in a hospital in response to SARS using the ethical framework 'accountability for reasonableness'.

Methods

This study was conducted at a large tertiary hospital in Toronto, Canada. There were two data sources: 1) over 200 key documents (e.g. emails, bulletins), and 2) 35 interviews with key informants. Analysis used a modified thematic technique in three phases: open coding, axial coding, and evaluation.

Results

Participants described the types of priority setting decisions, the decision making process and the reasoning used. Although the hospital leadership made an effort to meet the conditions of 'accountability for reasonableness', they acknowledged that the decision making was not ideal. We described good practices and opportunities for improvement.

Conclusions

'Accountability for reasonableness' is a framework that can be used to guide fair priority setting in health care organizations, such as hospitals. In the midst of a crisis such as SARS where guidance is incomplete, consequences uncertain, and information constantly changing, where hour-by-hour decisions involve life and death, fairness is more important rather than less.
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Metadata
Title
SARS and hospital priority setting: a qualitative case study and evaluation
Authors
Jennifer AH Bell
Sylvia Hyland
Tania DePellegrin
Ross EG Upshur
Mark Bernstein
Douglas K Martin
Publication date
01-12-2004
Publisher
BioMed Central
Published in
BMC Health Services Research / Issue 1/2004
Electronic ISSN: 1472-6963
DOI
https://doi.org/10.1186/1472-6963-4-36

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