• Anaesthesia · Oct 2022

    Review

    Prevalence and commonality of non-technical skills and human factors in airway management guidelines: a narrative review of the last 5 years.

    • D A Edelman, L V Duggan, S L Lockhart, S D Marshall, M C Turner, and D J Brewster.
    • Department of Medicine, Alfred Hospital, Melbourne, Australia.
    • Anaesthesia. 2022 Oct 1; 77 (10): 1129-1136.

    AbstractThe primary aim of this review was to identify, analyse and codify the prominence and nature of human factors and ergonomics within difficult airway management algorithms. A directed search across OVID Medline and PubMed databases was performed. All articles were screened for relevance to the research aims and according to predetermined exclusion criteria. We identified 26 published airway management algorithms. A coding framework was iteratively developed identifying human factors and ergonomic specific words and phrases based on the Systems Engineering Initiative for Patient Safety model. This framework was applied to the papers to delineate qualitative and quantitative results. Our results show that human factors are well represented within recent airway management guidelines. Human factors associated with work systems and processes featured more prominently than user and patient outcome measurement and adaption. Human factors are an evolving area in airway management and our results highlight that further considerations are necessary in further guideline development.© 2022 The Authors. Anaesthesia published by John Wiley & Sons Ltd on behalf of Association of Anaesthetists.

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