Establishing Perioperative Surgical Homes (PSHs) under the direction of physician anesthesiologists has been discussed for a few years, but the focus has been on treating adults. A Sunday session will look at options to make sure children will not slip through the cracks by looking at the possibility of developing pediatric PSHs.
ANESTHESIOLOGY 2015 Daily
Former Navy commander Michael Abrashoff to speak on transformative leadership at Opening Session
The ANESTHESIOLOGY® 2015 annual meeting will get off to an inspirational start at 9 a.m. this morning as Michael Abrashoff addresses attendees on leadership and organizational transformation.
Question of the day: ‘Why does ASA membership matter to you?’
Membership Matters is a communications campaign highlighting the value of ASA membership for all providers of anesthesia care, so the ASA Daily News asked attendees about the value of joining ASA.
Moving toward optimal post-op pain management
A new vision in pain management is sweeping through anesthesiology. More effective pain management before, during and long after surgery can translate directly into improved outcomes, shorter length of stay, reduced costs and improved patient satisfaction.
Hospitals redesigning the way anesthesia care is delivered
Delivering anesthesia care isn’t always as efficient as it can be. It is not always the fault of anesthesiologists, surgeons or the team in the operating room (O.R.). Key drivers of inefficient care often come directly from having to deliver care in an inefficient environment. In recent years, process and architectural design specialists have been transforming the way health care is delivered.
DNR: Negotiating and respecting patient goals in surgery
Advance directives are not always helpful. Take the patient who needs a palliative surgery but has a do not resuscitate (DNR) order. Safely administering anesthesia is difficult enough without a DNR order in place. If the patient is 15, old enough to voice considered opinions about resuscitation but not old enough to give legal consent, the physician anesthesiologist can be in a difficult position.
APSF videos an excellent way to help improve patient safety
Every physician anesthesiologist should know which patients are at elevated risk for fire hazards — surgery above T5 and the use of an ignition source in proximity to an oxidizer-enriched atmosphere. Yet despite the knowledge, surgical fires are a continuing hazard to patients, to health care providers and to facilities.
ANESTHESIOLOGY™ 2015 launches simultaneous publication of trials
ASA is unveiling three major clinical trials Sunday with simultaneous publication in major medical journals. This is the first year the Society is presenting key results on the day of publication.
Session to present update on malpractice issues
Bad things can happen to good anesthesiologists. But bad patient outcomes don’t have to translate into bad legal and financial outcomes. Every physician anesthesiologist can take a few basic steps to protect their patients and themselves.
Managing work hours for the good of our patients — and ourselves
Every physician anesthesiologist remembers the long, fatigue-filled and sometimes difficult hours of residency. A growing body of evidence suggests that fatigue is more than feeling tired. Fatigue can be an important factor in patient safety and physician health.