Best practice & research. Clinical anaesthesiology
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The American Society of Anesthesiologists (ASA) Closed Claims database was started in 1985 to study anaesthesia injuries to improve patient safety, now containing 8954 claims with 5230 claims since 1990. Over the decades, claims for surgical anaesthesia decreased, while claims for acute and chronic pain management increased. In the 2000s, chronic pain management involved 18%, acute pain management 9% and obstetrical anaesthesia formed 8% of claims. ⋯ The most common complications were death (26%), nerve injury (22%) and permanent brain damage (9%). The most common damaging events due to anaesthesia in claims were regional-block-related (20%), respiratory (17%), cardiovascular (13%) and equipment-related events (10%). This review examines recent findings and clinical implications for injuries in management of the difficult airway, MAC, non-operating room locations, obstetric anaesthesia and chronic pain management.
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Following the overwhelming evidence of adverse events in hospital practice, the World Health Organization (WHO)'s World Alliance for Patient Safety has launched the 'Safe Surgery Saves Lives' campaign, which has developed a surgical safety checklist aimed to improve patient safety. The implementation of this checklist has met with mixed reactions in different institutions. Many countries have still not adopted its use. In this article, a brief review is presented regarding the role of the WHO checklist, barriers to its implementation and strategies for successful adoption.
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Best Pract Res Clin Anaesthesiol · Jun 2011
ReviewEducation, teaching & training in patient safety.
Patient Safety is not a side-effect of good patient care by skilled clinicians. Patient safety is a subject on its own, which was traditionally not taught to medical personnel. This must and will dramatically change in the future. ⋯ But Anaesthesiology must continue in its efforts in order to stay at the top of the patient safety movement, as many other disciplines gain speed in this topic. We should strive to fulfill the Helsinki Declaration and move even beyond that. As the European Council states: "Education for patient-safety should be introduced at all levels within health-care systems"
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Best Pract Res Clin Anaesthesiol · Jun 2011
ReviewEffective handover communication: an overview of research and improvement efforts.
In the recent patient safety literature, there is an increasing agreement that effective patient handover is critical to patient safety by ensuring appropriate coordination among health-care providers and continuity of care. It has repeatedly been pointed out that a lack of formal training and formal systems for patient handover impede the good practice necessary to maintain high standards of clinical care. ⋯ In reviewing the current state of research and improvement, we identified key areas for future research. Despite the growing evidence at the descriptive level, future research will have to take a more systematic approach to establish valid measures of handover quality and safety, establish the causal effects of handover characteristics on safe care and identify best practices in safe handover and effective interventions within and across health-care settings.
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Best Pract Res Clin Anaesthesiol · Jun 2011
ReviewThe Helsinki Declaration on Patient Safety in Anaesthesiology: putting words into practice.
In June 2010, the European Board of Anaesthesiology (EBA) of the European Union of Medical Specialists (UEMS) and the European Society of Anaesthesiology (ESA) signed the Helsinki Declaration for Patient Safety in Anaesthesiology at the Euroanaesthesia meeting in Helsinki. The document had been jointly prepared by these two principal anaesthesiology organisations in Europe who pledged to improve the safety of patients being cared for by anaesthesiologists working in the medical fields of perioperative care, intensive care medicine, emergency medicine and pain medicine. The declaration stated their current heads of agreement on patient safety and listed a number of principle requirements as thought necessary for anaesthesiologists, anaesthesiology departments and institutions to introduce to improve patient safety. Good words are only as good as their implementation and this article explains the rationale behind them and expands the recommendations practically so anaesthesiologists caring for patients everywhere can follow the Helsinki Declaration and put the words into practice.