Lepage Marc-Antoine, Lecavalier Annie, Baldini Gabriele, Sun Ning-Zi, Bessissow Amal
Faculty of Medicine and Health Sciences, McGill University, Montreal, Canada.
Centre Intégré de Santé Et de Services Sociaux de Laval, Laval, Canada.
Perioper Med (Lond). 2025 Jan 13;14(1):6. doi: 10.1186/s13741-024-00489-2.
The integration of procedure-specific risks into preoperative patient assessment and optimization are crucial aspects of perioperative care. However, data on internists' knowledge of surgical and anesthetic principles and practices are limited. We thus sought to identify internists' knowledge gaps in terms of surgical- and anesthetic-specific risk factors and characteristics.
An open and voluntary e-survey was conducted via LimeSurvey between April and July 2021 to evaluate Canadian internists' knowledge of surgical and anesthetic principles and practices. The survey included the perceived importance and knowledge of several key surgical and anesthetic aspects, such as surgery duration, procedure-specific cardiac risk, bleeding risk, and thrombotic risk. It also assessed pre- and post-survey self-reported confidence levels in one's knowledge of these characteristics. Finally, we investigated how internists optimize some of the preoperative risks.
A total of 173 Canadian internists opened the survey link, and 121 completed it (completion rate 70%). While the majority of respondents considered surgical and anesthetic principles and practices as important, most identified knowledge gaps. Participants generally estimated surgery duration and procedure-specific cardiac risk adequately. However, they tended to underestimate procedure-specific bleeding risk for general (58%) and orthopedic (76%) surgeries and to overestimate procedure-specific thrombotic risk for vascular (63%) and genitourinary (60%) surgeries. Furthermore, there is a lack of consensus regarding the appropriate hemoglobin A1c target and 0% of respondents reported using the guideline-suggested hemoglobin threshold for investigation and intervention.
Overall, our findings identify significant knowledge gaps among Canadian internists in preoperative assessment of procedure-specific risk factors and can be used to inform both the development of educational initiatives and future research to improve the quality of preoperative patient care.
将特定手术风险纳入术前患者评估和优化是围手术期护理的关键环节。然而,关于内科医生对外科和麻醉原则及实践的了解的数据有限。因此,我们试图确定内科医生在外科和麻醉特定风险因素及特征方面的知识差距。
2021年4月至7月期间,通过LimeSurvey进行了一项开放的自愿电子调查,以评估加拿大内科医生对外科和麻醉原则及实践的了解。该调查包括对几个关键外科和麻醉方面的重要性认知和知识,如手术持续时间、特定手术的心脏风险、出血风险和血栓形成风险。它还评估了调查前后自我报告的对这些特征的知识的信心水平。最后,我们调查了内科医生如何优化一些术前风险。
共有173名加拿大内科医生打开了调查链接,121人完成了调查(完成率70%)。虽然大多数受访者认为外科和麻醉原则及实践很重要,但大多数人都发现了知识差距。参与者总体上对手术持续时间和特定手术的心脏风险估计较为准确。然而,他们往往低估了普通外科手术(58%)和骨科手术(76%)的特定手术出血风险,高估了血管外科手术(63%)和泌尿生殖系统手术(60%)的特定手术血栓形成风险。此外,对于合适的糖化血红蛋白目标缺乏共识,0%的受访者报告使用指南建议的血红蛋白阈值进行调查和干预。
总体而言,我们的研究结果确定了加拿大内科医生在术前评估特定手术风险因素方面存在重大知识差距,可用于为教育举措的制定和未来研究提供信息,以提高术前患者护理质量。