Heterogeneity in US pandemic allocation policies: state-to-state variation, stakeholder insights and implications for older Americans

Question - Raised Hand
Award Amount
$318,000
Project Dates
08/01/2021 to 04/30/2024
Principal Investigator
Erin S. DeMartino, MD (Mayo Clinic)

Consultant: Susan M. Wolf, JD (University of Minnesota)

Even before 2020, older Americans made up the majority of ICU admissions and deaths. In 2020, as a pandemic infiltrates every corner of the globe, older adults are disproportionately impacted, facing greater morbidity and mortality from COVID-19 than any other segment of the population. As a society we are tackling unsettled questions about how best to deploy limited resources as we confront mass critical illness on a scale not seen for generations. These questions strike at the core of our ethos as a nation, challenging us to craft policies to sort through waves of patients, knowing that if crisis standards of care are enacted those policies will determine who is allocated intensive care resources – and who is not. 

Publications Grants

DeMartino ES, Ennis JS, Wolf SM, Sulmasy DP.

Learning from COVID-19 Triage Schemes to Face the Next Public Health Emergency

. Journal of the American Geriatrics Society 2024;1:1-4.
Nguyen NV, Riggan KA, Ennis JS, Tilburt JC, Smith AK, Kramer DB, Sulmasy DP, DeMartino ES.

Estimating population impact of state triage policies restricting healthcare access for older adults with chronic conditions

. Journal of the American Geriatrics Society 2024;72(1):294-296.
Ennis JS, Riggan KA, Nguyen NV, Kramer DB, Smith AK, Sulmasy DP, Tilburt JC, Wolf SM, DeMartino ES.

Triage Procedures for Critical Care Resource Allocation During Scarcity

. JAMA Network Open 2023;6(8):1-12.