Alkassimi Sara M, Habib Razan A, Arab Abeer A, Boker Abdulaziz M
Department of Anesthesia and Critical Care, Faculty of Medicine, King Abdulaziz University, Jeddah, Saudi Arabia.
Consultant of Anesthesiology, Department of Anesthesia and Critical Care, King Abdulaziz University, Jeddah, Saudi Arabia.
Saudi J Anaesth. 2020 Jan-Mar;14(1):28-32. doi: 10.4103/sja.SJA_281_19. Epub 2020 Jan 6.
Anesthetists deal with many situations where they decide whether proceeding with anesthesia is safe or not. These are termed "go or no-go" decisions. Although guidelines have been developed to ensure safe anesthesia, many factors affect anesthetists' decision in practice. Therefore, we aimed to assess the variability in risk tolerance when making "go or no-go" decisions among anesthetists in Saudi Arabia.
A questionnaire-based study that included anesthetists practicing in Saudi Arabia from 1--14 October 2017 was conducted. The questionnaire presented 11 clinical scenarios that involved deviation from guidelines, followed by four questions where the participants were asked to decide whether they would proceed with administering anesthesia, write a comment explaining their decision, to predict whether a colleague would make the same decision, and if they had a previous similar experience.
A total of 124 anesthetists responded, of which 56.5% were consultants. There was no absolute consensus over the decision to proceed in any scenario. Most of the respondents who would proceed (67.35%) expected a colleague to make the same decision. Anesthetists who encountered a previous similar experience were more likely to proceed ( = 0.000). There was no significant difference among the respondents' decisions according to years of experience ( = 0.121). Analysis of the comments showed that procedure urgency and presence of alternatives to deficient resources were the most frequent factors that dictated anesthetists' decision.
There is a wide variation in risk tolerance among anesthetists. Further simulation-based studies are needed to identify and address factors that affect anesthetists' decisions.
麻醉医生会面临许多需要决定是否继续进行麻醉的情况。这些被称为“继续或停止”决策。尽管已经制定了指南以确保麻醉安全,但在实际操作中,许多因素会影响麻醉医生的决策。因此,我们旨在评估沙特阿拉伯麻醉医生在做出“继续或停止”决策时风险承受能力的差异。
进行了一项基于问卷调查的研究,纳入了2017年10月1日至14日在沙特阿拉伯执业的麻醉医生。问卷呈现了11个涉及偏离指南的临床场景,随后有四个问题,要求参与者决定是否会继续进行麻醉、撰写解释其决策的评论、预测同事是否会做出相同决策以及他们是否有过类似经历。
共有124名麻醉医生做出回应,其中56.5%为顾问医生。在任何场景下,对于是否继续的决策都没有绝对的共识。大多数会继续的受访者(67.35%)预计同事会做出相同决策。有过类似经历的麻醉医生更有可能继续(P = 0.000)。根据工作年限,受访者的决策之间没有显著差异(P = 0.121)。对评论的分析表明,手术紧迫性和缺乏资源时是否有替代方案是决定麻醉医生决策的最常见因素。
麻醉医生的风险承受能力存在很大差异。需要进一步开展基于模拟的研究,以识别和解决影响麻醉医生决策的因素。