Rationing Our Finite Resources� with Our Eyes Open
Two articles published in the latest NEJM issue are devoted to �our finite resources� and the inevitability of rationing care. First Dr. Howard Brody is attempting to rephrase the issue as one of �waste avoidance� and is delving into the ethics of practicing waste avoidance which is defined as withholding non-beneficial care. Of course non beneficial is not a cut and dry label, so Dr. Brody is envisioning that �[a]n ethical system for eliminating waste will include a robust appeals process�, where �[p]hysicians, as loyal patient advocates, must invoke the process when (according to their best clinical judgment) a particular patient would benefit from an intervention even if the average patient won't�. While the sentiment is commendable, I am not clear who exactly should physicians appeal to �according to their best clinical judgment� and I am not certain where the newly empowered and engaged patient go. Or is all this empowerment and engagement talk just a cruel joke? The second a...