Yang Homer, Littleford Judith, Orser Beverley A, Zaccagnini Marco, Umedaly Hamed, Olsen Monica, Raazi Mateen, LeDez Kenneth, Adam Law J, Giffin Mitch, Foerster Jason, D'Souza Brandon, Ali Irfaan, Dillane Derek, Christodoulou Chris, Buu Natalie, Bryan Rob
Department of Anesthesia & Perioperative Medicine, Schulich School of Medicine & Dentistry, Western University, C3-128 London Health Sciences UH, 339 Windermere Rd, London, ON, N6A 5A5, Canada.
Max Rady College of Medicine, University of Manitoba, Winnipeg, MB, Canada.
Can J Anaesth. 2024 Dec;71(12):1627-1645. doi: 10.1007/s12630-024-02812-3. Epub 2024 Sep 10.
The purpose of this Special Article is to document the evolution of the anesthesia assistant (AA) profession in Canada and summarize AA practice at Canadian institutions as it exists today, five decades after Quebec and 15 years after most other provinces formalized AA practice.
Through the Management Committee of the Association of Canadian University Departments of Anesthesia (ACUDA), we conducted a purposeful sampling of all ACUDA chairs or their delegates. We requested the following data: history of AAs becoming a reality in their particular province or region; potential recruitment pools; training programs and curricula; pathway to credentialing; funding, pay, retention, recruitment, and status of union representation; and metrics.
Data were provided by 19 institutions in 8 provinces: Newfoundland and Labrador, Nova Scotia, Quebec, Ontario, Manitoba, Saskatchewan, Alberta, and British Columbia. Given the different health care governance structures across the provinces, AA roles vary in terms of its associated technical, clinical, and educational responsibilities. The role of AAs in supporting anesthesia care through equipment maintenance and assistance with airway management, resuscitation, and administration of regional anesthesia seems to be well established, as is their role in providing brief intraoperative relief for anesthesiologists during a stable period of anesthesia. Anesthesia assistant duties continue to evolve, becoming more aligned with the specific institution and less dependent on the supervising anesthesiologist. Apart from the initial metrics collected during the Ontario ACT implementation pilot projects, we are not aware of any formal metrics, current or ongoing, being collected across Canada, related to either patient safety events or perioperative efficiency.
This compilation of pan-Canadian AA data shows diverse models of practice and highlights the value to patients and the health care system as a whole of incorporating these allied professionals into the anesthesia care team (ACT). The present findings allow us to offer suggestions for consideration during discussions of retention, recruitment, program expansion, and cross-country collection of metrics and other data. We conclude by making six recommendations: 1. recognize that implementation of ACTs is a key element in solving the challenge of an increasing surgical backlog; 2. develop, or facilitate the development of, metrics and increase data-sharing nationally to enable health care authorities to better understand the importance of AAs in patient safety and perioperative efficiency; 3. develop and implement funding strategies to lower the barriers to AA training such as hospital-sponsored positions, ongoing salary support, and return-of-service arrangements; 4. ensure that salaries appropriately reflect the increased level of training and added levels of responsibility of certified AAs; 5. develop long-term strategies to ensure stable funding, recruitment and retention, and a better match between the number of AA training positions and the need for newly certified AAs; and 6. engage all stakeholders to acknowledge that AAs, as knowledgeable and specifically trained assistants, not only fulfill their defined clinical role but also contribute significantly to patient safety and clinical efficiency by assuming nondirect patient care tasks.
本专题文章旨在记录加拿大麻醉助理(AA)职业的发展历程,并总结当前加拿大各机构中AA的实践情况,此时距离魁北克省正式确立该职业已过去五十年,而在大多数其他省份正式确立AA实践也已过去十五年。
通过加拿大大学麻醉学系协会(ACUDA)管理委员会,我们对所有ACUDA主席或其代表进行了有目的抽样。我们索要了以下数据:AA在其所在特定省份或地区成为现实的历史;潜在招聘渠道;培训项目和课程;认证途径;资金、薪酬、留用、招聘以及工会代表情况和地位;以及衡量标准。
来自八个省份的19家机构提供了数据,这些省份包括:纽芬兰与拉布拉多省、新斯科舍省、魁北克省、安大略省、曼尼托巴省、萨斯喀彻温省、艾伯塔省和不列颠哥伦比亚省。鉴于各省医疗保健管理结构不同,AA的角色在相关技术、临床和教育职责方面存在差异。AA通过设备维护以及在气道管理、复苏和区域麻醉给药方面提供协助来支持麻醉护理的作用似乎已得到充分确立,他们在麻醉稳定期为麻醉医生提供短暂术中缓解的作用也是如此。麻醉助理的职责在不断演变,与特定机构的契合度更高,对监督麻醉医生的依赖程度更低。除了安大略省ACT实施试点项目期间收集的初始衡量标准外,我们不知道加拿大目前或正在进行的、与患者安全事件或围手术期效率相关的任何正式衡量标准。
这份全加拿大AA数据汇编展示了多样的实践模式,并凸显了将这些辅助专业人员纳入麻醉护理团队(ACT)对患者和整个医疗保健系统的价值。目前的研究结果使我们能够在讨论留用、招聘、项目扩展以及全国范围内的衡量标准和其他数据收集时提出一些建议以供考虑。我们最后提出六项建议:1. 认识到实施ACT是解决手术积压增加这一挑战的关键要素;2. 制定或推动制定衡量标准,并在全国范围内增加数据共享,以使医疗保健当局能够更好地理解AA在患者安全和围手术期效率方面的重要性;3. 制定并实施资金战略,以降低AA培训的障碍,如医院赞助职位、持续的薪资支持和服务回报安排;4. 确保薪资适当反映认证AA培训水平的提高和责任的增加;5. 制定长期战略,以确保稳定的资金、招聘和留用,并使AA培训职位数量与新认证AA的需求更好匹配;6. 让所有利益相关者认识到,AA作为知识渊博且经过专门培训的助手,不仅履行其规定的临床角色,还通过承担非直接患者护理任务为患者安全和临床效率做出重大贡献。