Rw. Watts et M. Bassham, TRAINING, SKILLS AND APPROACH TO POTENTIALLY DIFFICULT ANESTHESIA IN GENERAL-PRACTITIONER ANESTHETISTS, Anaesthesia and intensive care, 22(6), 1994, pp. 706-709
Citations number
8
Categorie Soggetti
Anesthesiology,"Emergency Medicine & Critical Care
Seventy-six of the 92 practising South Australian rural general practi
tioner anaesthetists responded to a questionnaire on anaesthetic train
ing skills and approach to potentially difficult anaesthesia. The mean
training period in anaesthesia was 7.5 months, 24% at registrar level
. Eight per cent had no training, and 40% had 3 months or less. Thirty
-three per cent trained exclusively overseas and 13% hold a Diploma in
Anaesthesia. A total of 11,400 anaesthetics were performed by 76 gene
ral practitioners in 1992 at an average of 152 (range 2 to 1500). The
mean visual analog ''comfort score'' in performing anaesthesia was 6.6
and correlated best with the number of procedures per year (r = 0.32,
P = 0.03). Forty-six per cent of general practitioners provided anaes
thesia for the 0 to 12 month age group, and only 35% had regional skil
ls to use in obstetric anaesthesia. Patients classified as ASA grade 3
to 5, disease states such as unstable angina, severe asthma, and risk
factors such as skeletal myopathy, were avoided by most general pract
itioners. The failed intubation rate was 50/10,000. The conclusion is
that South Australian general practitioner anaesthetists exhibit a gen
erally safe approach to selection of patients for anaesthesia, althoug
h in some instances the approach to potentially difficult anaesthesia
should be more conservative.