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by DSMan195276
780 days ago
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> scale up production while making the devices smaller and cheaper, and in the meantime seek out alternative long-term facilities for palliative care to avoid occupying hospital beds. I feel like you're just hand-waving away the issue. If they could move them out of the ICU they would have, the issue is they require constant care while on the ECMO machine. Additionally, while the "smaller, cheaper, no care required" devices may appear in the future (the article talks about this very thing), they're not here _right now_. There's currently a limited number of machines and people who can maintain them in the hospital, and hence an immediate problem that they have to deal with when there's more people who can benefit from them than machines they have. |
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Why can't more machines be made? Why are there a limited number of people who can maintain them and perform care on a long-term basis? These are questions that lie downstream of many long-standing institutional problems with the practice of medicine in the US, and framing them as ethical "maybe-some-people-should-just-die" questions is missing the broader story.