Management of Hypoplastic Left Heart Syndrome in Low-Resource Settings and the Ethics of Decision-Making

Author:

Edwin Frank12ORCID,Edwin Ama K.34,Palacios-Macedo Alexis56,Mamorare Hendrick7,Yao Nana Akyaa28

Affiliation:

1. Ho Cardiothoracic Centre, School of Medicine, University of Health & Allied Sciences, Ho, Ghana

2. National Cardiothoracic Centre, Accra, Ghana

3. Department of Psychological Medicine and Mental Health, School of Medicine, University of Health and Allied Sciences, Ho, Ghana

4. Department of Bioethics and Palliative Care, University of Ghana Medical Centre, Accra, Ghana

5. Division de Cirugıa Cardiovasclar, Instituto Nacional de Pediatria, Mexico City, Mexico

6. Centro Pediatrico del Corazon ABC-Kardias, Mexico City, Mexico

7. Maboneng Heart Institute, Johannesburg, South Africa

8. Department of Pediatric Cardiology, School of Medical Sciences, University of Cape Coast, Cape Coast, Ghana

Abstract

Hypoplastic left heart syndrome (HLHS) is possibly the most challenging congenital heart defect to confront in any setting. The highly specialized infrastructure and resources needed to treat HLHS is not available in many low-resource settings. However, low-resource settings must not be assumed to be synonymous with low- and middle-income countries as national income is not necessarily indicative of a country’s prioritization of healthcare resources. Besides, a low-resource setting may be institution-specific as well as country-specific. We have stratified institutional capabilities for addressing the requirements of treatment for HLHS into five levels based on the capacity for diagnosis, intervention, and post-discharge monitoring. Depending on institutional capabilities, children born with HLHS in low-resource settings experience a spectrum of outcomes ranging from death without diagnosis to the hybrid or Norwood stage 1 palliation. The decision-making is ethically challenging when resources are scarce and economic efficiency must be considered in the context of distributive justice. Even in settings that would be classified as resource-rich where survival after surgery and quality of life afterward keep improving, not every parent would choose surgical intervention for their hypothetical child with HLHS.

Publisher

SAGE Publications

Subject

Cardiology and Cardiovascular Medicine,General Medicine,Pediatrics, Perinatology and Child Health,Surgery

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