Björn Persson, head of operations for intensive care at Karolinska, says that individual doctors should have the document as support when they make difficult decisions.
- We have an extreme situation in intensive care with a very high load. In this situation, it is extremely important that we use our resources for the patients we believe have the greatest chance of surviving and benefiting from intensive care, he says and continues.
- Although you may not have a chronologically high age, and may be in your 60s, but in combination with, for example, severe diabetes, cardiovascular disease or stroke, the biological age can be high. Of those who have a failing health and end up under intensive care and come out of it, many of the patients die within the immediate time. Intensive care is very tough for the body even for a healthy person. Then we make an individual assessment in each case.
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- To me it is nothing strange or controversial. There is nothing that stands out or is really new. In my eyes, this is exactly how we reason about each patient when intensive care is being considered. The difference is that it is formalized in text clearly now, which I think is valuable, says Mattias Bergström.
According to Karolinska, the new decision support is based on the National Board of Health and Welfare's new national guidelines for intensive care priorities in extraordinary circumstances, which were developed especially during the pandemic. Karolinska's decision support is more specifically held than the National Board of Health's guidelines. According to Lars Sandman, professor of health ethics at Linköping University, it is expected that an interpretation of the document will be made.
- It was a conscious choice that we did not go into such medical parameters, nor to specify any type of age for a so-called cut-off limit. However, there is a general writing about the importance of a high chronological age, says Lars Sandman.