The impact of an anesthesia residency teaching service on anesthesia-controlled time and postsurgical patient outcomes: a retrospective observational study on 15,084 surgical cases.

IF 2.6 Q1 SURGERY Patient Safety in Surgery Pub Date : 2024-04-01 DOI:10.1186/s13037-024-00394-z
Davene Lynch, Paul D Mongan, Amie L Hoefnagel
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Abstract

Background: Limited data exists regarding the impact of anesthesia residents on operating room efficiency and patient safety outcomes. This investigation hypothesized that supervised anesthesiology residents do not increase anesthesia-controlled or prolonged extubation times compared to supervised certified registered nurse anesthetists (CRNA)/certified anesthesiologist assistants (CAA) or anesthesiologists working independently. Secondary objectives included differences in critical outcomes such as intraoperative hypotension, cardiac and pulmonary complications, acute kidney injury, and mortality.

Methods: This retrospective single-center 24-month (January 1, 2020- December 31, 2021) cohort focused on primary outcomes of anesthesia-controlled times and prolonged extubation (>15 min) with additional assessment of secondary patient outcomes in adult patients having general anesthesia with an endotracheal tube or laryngeal mask airway for elective non-cardiac surgery. The study excluded sedation, obstetric, endoscopic, ophthalmology, and non-operating room procedures. Procedures were divided into three groups: anesthesiologists working solo, anesthesiologists supervising residents, or anesthesiologists supervising CRNA/CAAs. After univariate analysis, multivariable models were constructed to control for the univariate cofactor differences in the primary and secondary outcomes.

Results: A total of 15,084 surgical cases met the inclusion criteria for this study for the three different care models: solo anesthesiologists (1,204 cases), anesthesiologist/resident pairing (3,146 cases), and anesthesiologist/CRNA/CAA (14,040 cases). Before multivariate analysis, the resident group exhibited longer anesthesia-controlled times (median, [interquartile range], 26.1 [21.7-32.0], p < 0.001), compared to CRNA/CAA (23.9 [19.7-29.5]), and attending-only surgical cases (21.0 [17.9-25.4]). After adjusting for covariates in a general linear regression model (age, BMI, ASA classification, comorbidities, arterial line insertion, surgical service, and surgical location), there were no significant differences in the anesthesia-controlled times between the provider groups. Prolonged extubation times (>15 min) were significantly less common in the anesthesiologist-only group compared to the other groups (p < 0.001). Despite these time differences, there were no clinically significant differences among the groups in postoperative pulmonary or cardiac complications, renal impairment, or the 30-day mortality rate of patients.

Conclusion: Anesthesia residents do not increase anesthesia-controlled operating room times or adversely affect clinically relevant patient outcomes compared to anesthesiologists working independently or supervising certified registered nurse anesthetists or certified anesthesiologist assistants.

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麻醉住院医师教学服务对麻醉控制时间和手术后患者预后的影响:对 15,084 例手术的回顾性观察研究。
背景:有关麻醉住院医师对手术室效率和患者安全结果影响的数据有限。本调查假设,与受监督的注册麻醉师(CRNA)/注册麻醉师助理(CAA)或独立工作的麻醉师相比,受监督的麻醉科住院医师不会增加麻醉控制或延长拔管时间。次要目标包括术中低血压、心肺并发症、急性肾损伤和死亡率等关键结果的差异:该回顾性单中心队列研究为期 24 个月(2020 年 1 月 1 日至 2021 年 12 月 31 日),重点关注麻醉控制时间和拔管时间延长(>15 分钟)的主要结果,并对使用气管插管或喉罩气道进行全身麻醉的成人择期非心脏手术患者的次要结果进行额外评估。研究排除了镇静、产科、内窥镜、眼科和非手术室手术。手术分为三组:单独工作的麻醉医师、指导住院医师的麻醉医师或指导 CRNA/CAAs 的麻醉医师。在进行单变量分析后,建立了多变量模型来控制主要和次要结果中的单变量辅助因素差异:共有 15,084 个手术病例符合本研究的纳入标准,包括三种不同的护理模式:麻醉医师单独护理(1,204 个病例)、麻醉医师/住院医师配对护理(3,146 个病例)和麻醉医师/CRNA/CAA(14,040 个病例)。在进行多变量分析之前,住院医师组表现出更长的麻醉控制时间(中位数,[四分位间范围],26.1 [21.7-32.0],p 15 分钟),与其他组别相比,仅麻醉医师组明显较少(p 结论:与独立工作或监督注册麻醉师或注册麻醉师助理的麻醉医师相比,麻醉住院医师不会增加手术室的麻醉控制时间,也不会对临床相关的患者预后产生不利影响。
本文章由计算机程序翻译,如有差异,请以英文原文为准。
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来源期刊
CiteScore
6.80
自引率
8.10%
发文量
37
审稿时长
9 weeks
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