virtual class room excercise
Chapter 14
Hospital Ethics Committees: Rules, Membership Structure and
Difficulties
Hospital Issues Affect HECs
• The hospital mission is challenged by the need to be profitable and patient centered.
• Technology growth and sophistication are also challenges.
• Hospitals can respond to their many challenges through ethics committees.
HECs Assist With…
• Case consulting. • Policy development. • Joint Commission mandates. • Patient issues. • Financial issues. • And many other areas.
HECs in the 21st Century
• Develop standards and policies. • Educate staff members. • Provide clinical consulting. • Assist with resource allocation decisions.
Developing Policies/Standards
• HECs review existing standards and new ones for compliance with the mission, and conflict of interest, etc.
• They may be involved in patient-related policies.
• They may also be involved in policies on management issues.
Education
• The HEC sets goals for ethics education. • HECs can also provide ethics education. • HEC members must also be educated in order
to make sound decision recommendations for the hospital.
Clinical Consultation
• Clinical consultation is the most common function for HECs.
• Consultations can be made by the whole HEC or by small groups within it.
• Retrospective reviews are also used for discussion and learning.
Resource Allocation
• Because of the increase in utilization and changes in reimbursement, HECs are part of resource allocation decisions.
• Macroallocation issues need to be analyzed. • Microallocation issues center on patients and
scarce resources. • Cost and cost containment will continue to
matter.
HEC Membership
• HECs should include • Medical staff members. • Nursing staff members. • Administration and social services. • Clergy or bioethicists. • Hospital board member. • Patient representative.
HEC Membership
• Uses an interdisciplinary approach. • Considers the patient’s needs and desires. • Considers the effect on the caregiver. • Uses an interdisciplinary approach to meet the
requirements of regulators.
Background and Education
• HEC members should be chosen carefully. They should have expertise in ethics and in the ability to solve problems.
• HECs need to choose a model for decision making and be trained on this model.
• Procedural justice is required.
Institutional Commitment
• HECs need support from top levels of administration.
• The Chair of the HEC needs to be respected and understand the clinical side of the hospital.
• Ideally, the HEC should report to senior management.
Structures: Three Models
• Each model has advantages and disadvantages.
• They include the ethics committee: • As a committee of the hospital board. • As a committee directly reporting to the CEO. • As a committee reporting to the hospital
medical staff committee.
Difficulties and Needs Include:
• Lack of funding and time to address significant ethics issues.
• Lack of justification for expenditures for ethics committees.
• Need for more education on emerging issues.
Difficulties and Needs Include:
• Lack of training on business, finance, and management ethics.
• Lack of information regarding the public’s position on health care issues.
• The need to identify who and what the are. • The need to overcome clinical staff barriers to
use of HECs.
Practitioner’s View Update
• HECs will have more challenged because of the passage of PPACA.
• The volume of Baby Boomers entering the healthcare system also promises new ethics issues.
• Economic credentially will continue to be an ethics challenge.
Practitioner’s View Update
• CMS is becoming an active payer of healthcare claims through the VBP system.
• Tying reimbursement to patient satisfaction scores may open up Pandora’s box of ethics issues.
• Patient and financial issues will challenge HECs now and in the future.
In Summary…
- Slide Number 1
- Chapter 14
- Slide Number 3
- Hospital Issues Affect HECs
- HECs Assist With…
- HECs in the 21st Century
- Developing Policies/Standards
- Education
- Clinical Consultation
- Resource Allocation
- HEC Membership
- HEC Membership
- Background and Education
- Institutional Commitment
- Structures: Three Models
- Difficulties and Needs Include:
- Difficulties and Needs Include:
- Practitioner’s View Update
- Practitioner’s View Update
- In Summary…