Ohio hospitals and practices have been implementing a variety of conservation methods to preserve inventory, as it's clear normal levels won’t return for several months. A statewide group of perioperative experts has convened to develop principles for prioritizing which procedures should or should not be postponed if the conservation methods do not preserve enough supply.
OSMA and the Ohio Hospital Association are distributing the below document based on these recommendations should your healthcare institution need to safely postpone some procedures using “Allocation of Scarce Medical Resources” principles.
Updated October 16, 2024
As Ohio hospitals respond to the shortage in IV, OR irrigation and dialysate fluids due to the impact of Hurricane Helene, health care organizations across the nation are engaging in a variety of conservation methods to preserve the inventory of these products. Regardless of which IV fluid vendor they use, all hospitals in Ohio are implementing some conservation efforts.
A statewide group of perioperative experts was convened to develop principles for prioritizing which procedures should or should not be postponed if the initial rounds of conservation do not preserve enough supply or if the shortages continue for a longer period of time than expected.
This document outlines a framework that hospitals and health systems can use to implement more aggressive conservation measures by safely postponing some elective procedures using “Allocation of Scarce Medical Resources” principles.
A surgery/procedure should not be postponed if doing so could reasonably be expected to cause a:
If a patient meets any of criteria 1-7 above, the surgery/procedure should be highly prioritized and should not be postponed unless other lower priority surgeries/procedures have already been postponed.
If the hospital determines that some surgeries/procedures need to be postponed as a conservation strategy, surgeries/procedures that do not meet criteria 1-6 above should be prioritized based on: