Current opinion in anaesthesiology
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Curr Opin Anaesthesiol · Dec 2013
ReviewBeyond crisis resource management: new frontiers in human factors training for acute care medicine.
Error is ubiquitous in medicine, particularly during critical events and resuscitation. A significant proportion of adverse events can be attributed to inadequate team-based skills such as communication, leadership, situation awareness and resource utilization. Aviation-based crisis resource management (CRM) training using high-fidelity simulation has been proposed as a strategy to improve team behaviours. This review will address key considerations in CRM training and outline recommendations for the future of human factors education in healthcare. ⋯ The evolution of CRM training involves a 'Triple Threat' approach that integrates mental model theory for team and task processes, training for stressful situations and metacognition and error theory towards a more comprehensive training paradigm, with roots in high-risk industry and cognitive psychology. Further research is required to evaluate the impact of this approach on patient-oriented outcomes.
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Curr Opin Anaesthesiol · Dec 2013
ReviewThe changing landscape of anesthesia education: is Flipped Classroom the answer?
Educators in the specialty of anesthesiology are facing a number of challenges. A new generation of residents are entering the specialty and they have unique learning styles and expectations. The new duty hour regulations also encroach on the time available to the residents for education. In the last decade, a number of models for teaching and learning have been proposed to tackle these issues. ⋯ The 'Flipped Classroom' model seems to combine the best of both worlds. It allows the learner to assimilate basic information (lower order cognitive skills) from material that is placed online, allowing asynchronous learning. It frees up the teacher to use the face-to-face interaction time in the operating room and classroom for training the student in advanced concepts (higher order cognitive skills). This model allows efficient and effective use of time and technology, but involves the redesign of how in person time between faculty and residents are spent, along with the faculty development to effectively engage this new type of curriculum.
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Curr Opin Anaesthesiol · Dec 2013
ReviewBeyond the caudal: truncal blocks an alternative option for analgesia in pediatric surgical patients.
To discuss and compare the more commonly used truncal blocks with neuraxial techniques in children undergoing a variety of thoracic, abdominal and urological procedures. ⋯ The use of regional anesthesia particularly with ultrasound guidance is an integral part of pain management during the intraoperative and postoperative period in children who undergo surgery. Its use is essential in improving patient pain control and overall satisfaction as well as decreasing hospital stay and reducing hospital admission after surgery. Truncal blocks serve as an excellent alternative to neuraxial blockade, in patients who have a contraindication to neuraxial blockade, patients undergoing a unilateral procedure and those in an outpatient ambulatory setting undergoing routine procedures, wherein the adverse effects of neuraxial blockade such as motor weakness, difficulty ambulating, urinary retention, increased nausea and vomiting, may delay same day discharge.