⚕️

The Medical Priority

An Ethical Decision Exercise

⚠️ Choices cannot be changed once confirmed

The Situation

Setting: Small district hospital, severe storm, 2 AM

You are the senior physician on duty. Two critical patients arrive simultaneously, both requiring immediate ventilator support. You have only ONE functional ventilator available.

Patient A

23-year-old medical student

  • Severe respiratory failure
  • <10% survival without ventilator
  • Supports two younger siblings (ages 12, 14)
  • Top of her class, full scholarship

Patient B

68-year-old research scientist

  • Severe COVID-19 complications
  • <15% survival without ventilator
  • 6-8 months from completing cure for rare childhood disease
  • Research could save ~500 children/year
1
Initial Response
2
Allocation
3
Implementation
4
Communication

Phase 1: Initial Response

What's your first action upon receiving both patients?

Select a choice below. You can review your selection before confirming.

🔵 RATIONAL

Conduct Rapid Assessment

Take 2 minutes to assess both patients' vital signs before deciding

Information-seeking, methodical approach
✓ Your Choice
🟢 EMPATHETIC

Contact Nearby Hospitals

Attempt to call nearby hospitals for additional resources or transfer options

Collaborative problem-solving
✓ Your Choice
🔴 DECISIVE

Prepare for Younger Patient

Begin ventilator setup for the 23-year-old medical student immediately

Urgent action-oriented approach
✓ Your Choice
🟡 PROCEDURAL

Convene Ethics Committee

Attempt to gather hospital ethics committee for collective decision

Protocol-based, shared responsibility
✓ Your Choice

Phase 2: Resource Allocation

Based on your initial assessment, what's your next decision?

Your Phase 1 Choice:

Phase 3: Implementation

How will you execute and monitor your decision?

Your Previous Choices:

Phase 4: Communication & Aftermath

How will you communicate with the families and process this decision?

Your Journey So Far:

✓ Exercise Complete

Here is your complete decision path and analysis

Phase 1: Initial Response

Phase 2: Resource Allocation

Phase 3: Implementation

Phase 4: Communication

Analysis of Your Decisions

Understanding the ethical principles behind your decisions

Your Decision-Making Traits:

Reflection & Interpretation

What Do These Frameworks Mean?

Deontological Ethics (Duty-Based): This approach focuses on following moral rules and duties regardless of outcomes. If you scored high here, you likely prioritized professional obligations, fairness, and adherence to medical protocols.

Utilitarian Ethics (Greatest Good): This perspective seeks to maximize overall benefit. Higher scores suggest you considered the broader impact of your decisions, possibly weighing factors like the scientist's potential to save many future lives.

Virtue Ethics (Character): This framework emphasizes acting with excellence, compassion, and integrity. High scores indicate attention to quality of care and professional virtues like diligence and empathy.

Ethics of Care (Relationships): This approach prioritizes empathy, personal attention, and individual needs. Higher scores suggest you valued personal communication and emotional support for patients and families.

Why This Matters:

There is no "correct" ethical framework - real medical professionals often blend these approaches. This exercise helps you understand your instinctive ethical tendencies and recognize that others may approach the same dilemma with equal validity from different ethical perspectives.

Key Insight: Medical ethics is rarely about finding the "right" answer, but rather about thoughtfully navigating competing values while maintaining professional integrity and compassion.