Yes, "plastic" design, where you count on ductility, it pretty easy because if you respect the minimum conditions imposed by seismic codes you don't have to worry about a lot of stuff that will happen "under the hood" and more importantly it is far more economically (conditions like stirrups maximum step size, maximum compressed zone in beams - will ensure a "long" yield in bars - applying this ones you will have a large capable plastic rotation which is the key here because you can count of large amount of energy to be dissipated - so you will have a smaller lateral seismic force - and you can count on large moment redistribution ). So it's a great idea this concept, this methodology, of design of concrete structures in seismic zones but you can apply it only on structures with ductile elements, as i said elements that can "afford" to yield "hard".
In my opinion the slabs without beams is far far away from this type of elements so what i think i will do is to consider a ductility factor of 2 ( 1 will be elastic but counting for large safety factors of strength of material i think 2 is a more realistic elastic ductility factor) then apply the lateral force, which will be a lot bigger using 2, and design the slabs (calculate the reinforcement) for those stresses, the slab and the columns too. So when the earthquake will happen, designing on elastic phase, in my structure will be no yielding, or very small local portions, so no ductility, yes i lost the main advantage - economically part - so will be a lot more reinforcement so a lot more expensive but will be safe, safety always will be first.
About the restrictions of seismic code, i know i posted on ACI section but i did this because i saw other conversations where about this topic, i'm from Europe and in my country we are under EUROCODE jurisdiction but on seismic design (eurocode 8) the EN1998 is not, yet, implemented, so we have a national design code, in which, don't ask my why, this type of structures are not explicit forbidden so i can use this argument.
PS: I forgot to mention that the main stress in this slab due the seismic load is shear stress so typically this kind of stresses will produce fragile break so another plus for elastic method.