DENVER, April 9, 2020 /PRNewswire/ -- The Governor's
Expert Emergency Epidemic Response Committee developed Crisis
Standards of Care (CSC) after collaboration with experts and
communities. Governor Polis has authorized the Colorado Department
of Public Health and Environment to enact the standards when or if
necessary.
The Colorado Cross Disability Coalition (CCDC), The Arc of
Colorado, and over 140 organizations thank Gov. Jared Polis for ensuring that people with
disabilities and other vulnerable populations receive equitable
care under the CSC during the COVID-19 epidemic and other crisis
situations.
Specifically, the revised CSC Plan provides standards that
hospitals and other health care practitioners should implement once
activated by the Chief Medical Officer for the Colorado Department
of Public Health and Environment (CDPHE): (1) disallow medical
"rationing" based on disability alone, (2) prevent other
discrimination by establishing a blinded triage process, (3)
specify that all hospitals in Colorado have a plan for providing effective
communication accommodations with/for people who are disabled, and
(4) clarify that no person who uses a ventilator as part of their
regular care will have their ventilator taken away or receive less
than equitable care.
"We are grateful to Gov. Polis and his team for their
leadership in waging the war against COVID-19 and for ensuring that
American civil rights and ethical values are upheld – even, and
especially, when it comes to emergencies where medical care
resources may become scarce and hard decisions must be made," says
Julie Reiskin, Executive Director of
the CCDC.
"Every resident in this state deserves and should receive
equitable care, even during the most uncertain of times," says Lt.
Governor Dianne Primavera. "Our
Crisis Standards of Care guidelines are informed by ethicists,
physicians, and experts, including those in the Colorado disability
community who have been intimately involved with the response to
the COVID-19 pandemic. When a crisis like this hits, we must
protect everyone's rights, civil liberties and health."
"My family and I were appalled when we learned some states are
creating policies that discriminate against people with
disabilities and would absolutely jeopardize the life of my
daughter," says Dominic Capuano,
father of a 12-year-old with Down syndrome from Littleton, Colorado. "We are just so grateful
that our Governor, the CCDC, the Arc of Colorado, and the Global
Down Syndrome Foundation are getting this out right before the peak
of COVID-19 so there is no doubt that our Clarissa can get the care
she needs if she needs it."
While Reiskin acknowledges that some further revisions may be
needed to the guidelines around care allocation on the basis of
resource-utilization requirements/duration of mechanical
ventilation, Colorado's CSC Plan is authorized through executive
order of the Governor for implementation by CDPHE's Chief Medical
Officer. Activation of crisis standards in the Plan provides the
legal authorization for its implementation and use in health care
settings, in addition to liability protections for those providers
that follow its terms.
The Colorado CSC Plan provisions are also in stark contrast to
those in other states, which in two cases specifically state that
people with disabilities or medical conditions using a ventilator
could have their ventilator taken away so that a more able-bodied
person can be treated for COVID-19.
The Arc and the Center for Public Representation (CPR)
have taken the lead with other disability organizations to file
complaints to the U.S. Department of Health and Human Services
Office of Civil Rights (OCR) against the states of Alabama, Kansas, Pennsylvania, Tennessee, and Washington for publishing or having
COVID-19 related guidelines that would blatantly and illegally
discriminate against people with disabilities.
Under the Alabama Department of Public Health's Emergency
Operations Plan, for children and adults, hospitals are ordered to
"not offer mechanical ventilator support for patients" with "severe
or profound mental retardation," "moderate to severe dementia," and
"severe traumatic brain injury."
In Kansas, the state recently
developed a protocol called the "Toolkit for COVID-19." The
protocol specifically withholds life-saving treatment from patients
based on their disability diagnosis – without an individualized
assessment of their prospects for recovery – including people with
"advanced untreatable neuromuscular disease," people with "advanced
or irreversible immunocompromise," and people with some forms of
cancer. In addition, hospitals could take away ventilators from
individuals with disabilities or medical conditions who regularly
use their own ventilators.
The Interim Pennsylvania Crisis Standards of Care for Pandemic
Guidelines were just published on March 22,
2020 and discriminate against and jeopardize the lives of
people with disabilities. For children and adults, the "scoring" of
who gets care and who doesn't takes into account long-term
survival. The guidelines also discriminate against people with
preexisting conditions that are disabilities and those with
"severely life-limiting" co-morbid diagnoses, which can be left to
interpretation.
The standing Guidelines for the Ethical Allocation of Scarce
Resources in Tennessee exclude
many people with disabilities from critical care, including
ventilators. They further exclude people with metastatic cancer,
some people with dementia, and some people with traumatic brain
injury.
In Washington state, the
Department of Health published descriptions of the goals and flow
charts associated with emergency COVID-19 treatment that mirror the
existing policy of the state-run University of
Washington Medical Center (UWMC). Under this policy, the
priority would be to uniformly treat people who are younger
and healthier and to leave those who are older and sicker—including
people with disabilities—to die.
According to The Arc and the CPR, all five states have protocols
or guidelines in place that discriminate against people with
disabilities and violate federal disability rights laws including
the Americans with Disabilities Act (ADA), Section 504 of the
Rehabilitation Act (Section 504), and Section 1557 of the
Affordable Care Act (ACA), and places the numerous lives at serious
risk.
"Our civil rights laws protect the equal dignity of every human
life from ruthless utilitarianism," says Roger Severino, OCR Director. "HHS is
committed to leaving no one behind during an emergency and helping
health care providers meet that goal. Persons with disabilities,
with limited English skills, and older persons should not be put at
the end of the line for health care during emergencies."
OCR has issued guidelines and statements underscoring that the
policies associated with these states are aberrations in humanity
and ethics, violate federal law, and that legal action can be taken
if these policies are carried out.
The 140+ disability organizations that helped result in an
ethical CSC guideline in Colorado
includes the Colorado Cross Disability Coalition, The Arc of
Colorado, arc Thrift Stores, Global Down Syndrome Foundation
(GLOBAL), Anti-Defamation League (ADL), American Civil Liberties
Union (ACLU), Atlantis Community, Inc., The Denver Foundation,
Special Olympics Colorado, El Grupo Vida, One Colorado, Atlantis ADAPT, Disability Law
Colorado, and Alliance Colorado.
Learn more about how you can help and where you can file a
complaint if you believe you are facing discrimination in COVID-19
or other care.
The Colorado Cross-Disability Coalition
(CCDC)
The Colorado Cross-Disability Coalition is the
largest disability rights organization in Colorado that is run by and for people with
all types of disabilities with a mission to advocate for social
justice.
The Arc of Colorado
The Arc of Colorado promotes and protects the human rights of
people with intellectual and developmental disabilities and
actively supports their full inclusion and participation in the
community throughout their lifetimes.
Global Down Syndrome Foundation (GLOBAL)
The Global Down Syndrome Foundation (GLOBAL) is the largest
non-profit in the U.S. working to save lives and dramatically
improve health outcomes for people with Down syndrome. GLOBAL has
donated more than $32 million to
establish the first Down syndrome research institute supporting
over 400 scientists and over 2,000 patients with Down syndrome from
28 states and 10 countries. Working closely with Congress and the
National Institutes of Health, GLOBAL is the lead advocacy
organization in the U.S. for Down syndrome research and care.
GLOBAL has a membership of over 100 Down syndrome organizations
worldwide, and is part of a network of Affiliates – the Crnic
Institute for Down Syndrome, the Sie Center for Down Syndrome, and
the University of Colorado Alzheimer's
and Cognition Center – all on the Anschutz Medical Campus.
Press
Contacts
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|
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GLOBAL: Anca
Call
|
CCDC: Julie
Reiskin
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The Arc of Colorado:
Christiano Sosa
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acall@globaldownsyndrome.org
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jreiskin@ccdconline.org
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csosa@thearcofco.org
|
(720)
320-3832
|
(303)
667-4216
|
(970)
219-5925
|
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SOURCE Global Down Syndrome Foundation