Doctors express relief, cautious optimism at news Ontario will likely avoid triage protocol - Action News
Home WebMail Tuesday, November 26, 2024, 06:20 PM | Calgary | -5.3°C | Regions Advertise Login | Our platform is in maintenance mode. Some URLs may not be available. |
Toronto

Doctors express relief, cautious optimism at news Ontario will likely avoid triage protocol

Ontario says the situation in hospitals is concerning, but no plan to triage patients has been activated in the province at this time. Many doctors have received training for it and they say it wasn't easy.

Province says no triage model has been activated in Ontario at this time

Dr. Shajan Ahmed says most of his colleagues had never done any kind of triage training before. He was part of a group of physicians at UHN who participated in mock scenarios during the second wave. (Submitted/Shajan Ahmed)

Dr. Shajan Ahmed says he always thought oftriage training as something needed inother countries or in war zones, where doctors must decide who gets potentially life-saving care and who doesn't.

So when the emergency room physician with Toronto'sUniversity Health Networkfound himself watching a webinar about it to help prepare doctors for the third wave of COVID-19, he says he was in a bit of shock.

"To come to grips with this being right at our [doorsteps]here in Toronto, a place where we have all kinds of resources, it was really bizarre, it was surreal," he told CBC Toronto.

"None of us had trained for it before and none of us really signed up for this, to be honest with you."

Ahmed was among a group of around 60 physicians who received the training earlier this year.Itincluded running through mock cases, reading material and referencing online resources. The virtual sessions were conducted over Zoom with experts in simulation, ethics and palliative care.

The province says no triage model has been activated in Ontario at this time, and although the overall number of ICU admissions climbed to 900 for the first timelast Saturday, the rate of increase appears to have started to slow down.In a memo obtained by CBC News directed to hospital CEOs,Andrew Baker, the incident commander of the province's critical-care COVID-19 command centre, saysprojections remained "very concerning." But the memo also addsthey are "increasingly confident" that they will not need to recommend the use of the triage protocol.

But the prospect still weighs on the minds of some doctors, and forAhmed, the trainingmade the situation feel "very real."

"You read about it and you think it may come, but until you are actually doing the training it doesn't feel real until that point," he said, adding the sessions were more challenging than he anticipated.

"We would debrief after the sessions to talk about how it felt,and what was going through our minds and collectively everyone had to take a deep breath and, I guess, also a bit of a sigh of relief because we aren't actually in this situation."

Despitedescribing the current situation in GTA hospitalsas "bursting at the seams," Ahmedwants people to know if the triage model is activated, patients will still be cared for.The decision is not whether someone lives or dies but whether the person would be offered ICU level care.

"It's very complex and there's a lot of logistics involved but I don't want the public to think we're making decisions as to booting people to the street without providing care," he said.

"We absolutely will provide care."

Compassionate conversations part of the training

Dr. Erin O' Connor,the deputy medical director of the University Health Network's emergency departments, was part of the team that led the training.

"There's a lot of emotion around this andthis isn't something any physician orany health-care provider wants to do, but when we were getting ever closer to it we realized we needed to prepare ourselves," she said.

She addsthat conversations with patients and their families were a big part of it.

"It helped people find the right way to say this kindly and empathetically and to also recognize and process their own emotions around it."

WATCH | CBC's Talia Ricci speaks to doctors aboutthe triage protocol:

Doctors relieved following news that Ontario will likely avoid a triage protocol

3 years ago
Duration 2:22
A recent memo to hospitals said it's likely Ontario will avoid enacting a triage protocol but projections are still very concerning. Talia Ricci spoke to a couple of doctors about the experience of triage training and the cautious optimism they now feel.

O'Connor describesthe process as an application of tools to help determine how likely someone is to survive and their likelihood of survival after a year of any acute illness, not just COVID-19. She saysthe team looked at five cases that represented typical situationsin the emergency department and had participants evaluate the patients' chances of survival.

"It was a little bit of how you would apply the tools to different cases, so it wasn't so abstract," she explained. Shesaysthe whole point of developing the short term mortality risk tools wasto remove any bias from the system.

"It was very clearly laid out that decisions cannot be made based on race, gender, economic status, disability, or age. This is really looking at as much as possible the medical factors that contribute to whether someone has a high chance of survival at a year," she said.

Resources have been expanded through bringing health-care workers from other parts of the country, redeploying and retraining health-care workers, cancelling surgeries, bringing in more ventilators and transferring patients from hot-spot areas, among other measures. The Ministry of Health says the province continues to createadditional hospital beds in the province, including the creation of two mobile health units.

"The logistics have been massive. But all of these things are being done to prevent us from getting into a position where we have to triage resources," O'Connorsaid.

She saysshe's feeling cautiously optimistic giventhe recent trends.

"We'renot out of the woods yet because we know patients stay in the ICU for a long time but we are slightly backing away from the need to use this."

ButAhmedstill thinks about it, and is still concerned about the current state of ICUs. He's encouraging people to have conversations with loved ones about their goals of care.

"A lot of us lose sleep over it."