Department of Anaesthesia, Monash Medical Centre, Melbourne, Australia.
Department of Anaesthesia and Intensive Care, Warrington Hospitals NHS Foundation Trust, Cheshire, UK.
Anaesthesia. 2020 Dec;75(12):1671-1682. doi: 10.1111/anae.15269.
Multiple professional groups and societies worldwide have produced airway management guidelines. These are typically targeted at the process of tracheal intubation by a particular provider group in a restricted category of patients and reflect practice preferences in a particular geographical region. The existence of multiple distinct guidelines for some (but not other) closely related circumstances, increases complexity and may obscure the underlying principles that are common to all of them. This has the potential to increase cognitive load; promote the grouping of ideas in silos; impair teamwork; and ultimately compromise patient care. Development of a single set of airway management guidelines that can be applied across and beyond these domains may improve implementation; promote standardisation; and facilitate collaboration between airway practitioners from diverse backgrounds. A global multidisciplinary group of both airway operators and assistants was assembled. Over a 3-year period, a review of the existing airway guidelines and multiple reviews of the primary literature were combined with a structured process for determining expert consensus. Any discrepancies between these were analysed and reconciled. Where evidence in the literature was lacking, recommendations were made by expert consensus. Using the above process, a set of evidence-based airway management guidelines was developed in consultation with airway practitioners from a broad spectrum of disciplines and geographical locations. While consistent with the recommendations of the existing English language guidelines, these universal guidelines also incorporate the most recent concepts in airway management as well as statements on areas not widely addressed by the existing guidelines. The recommendations will be published in four parts that respectively address: airway evaluation; airway strategy; airway rescue and communication of airway outcomes. Together, these universal guidelines will provide a single, comprehensive approach to airway management that can be consistently applied by airway practitioners globally, independent of their clinical background or the circumstances in which airway management occurs.
全球多个专业团体和学会都制定了气道管理指南。这些指南通常针对特定提供者群体在特定类别患者中进行气管插管的过程,反映了特定地理区域的实践偏好。对于某些(但不是其他)密切相关情况,存在多个不同的指南,增加了复杂性,并可能掩盖了它们共有的基本原则。这有可能增加认知负担;促进思想的孤立分组;损害团队合作;并最终影响患者的护理。制定一套可在这些领域内外应用的单一气道管理指南,可能会提高实施效果;促进标准化;并促进来自不同背景的气道从业者之间的合作。一个由气道操作人员和助手组成的全球多学科小组成立了。在三年的时间里,对现有的气道指南进行了审查,并对主要文献进行了多次审查,同时结合了确定专家共识的结构化流程。对这些指南之间的任何差异进行了分析和协调。在文献中缺乏证据的情况下,通过专家共识提出了建议。使用上述流程,与来自广泛学科和地理位置的气道从业者协商制定了一套基于证据的气道管理指南。虽然这些指南与现有的英语指南的建议一致,但这些通用指南还纳入了气道管理的最新概念以及关于现有指南未广泛涉及的领域的声明。这些建议将分四部分发表,分别涉及:气道评估;气道策略;气道救援和气道结果的沟通。这些通用指南将共同为气道管理提供一种单一的、全面的方法,气道从业者无论其临床背景或气道管理发生的情况如何,都可以全球一致地应用。