There are pluses to having CRNAs because they can relieve you for lunch, breaks, and late days. Plus, they can take the less educational cases on the schedule.
However, I would strongly advise against going to a program that has a nurse anesthesia school (i.e. SRNAs), because then you have to compete with them for cases. After all, they have educational requirements to fill as well.
Programs that have SRNA's competing with residents for cases include Duke, Wake Forest, Alabama, USC, Georgetown, Iowa, Mayo, Columbia, Pittsburgh, and Baylor. Be careful and keep your eyes open out on the interview trail.
There are pluses to having CRNAs because they can relieve you for lunch, breaks, and late days. Plus, they can take the less educational cases on the schedule.
However, I would strongly advise against going to a program that has a nurse anesthesia school (i.e. SRNAs), because then you have to compete with them for cases. After all, they have educational requirements to fill as well.
Programs that have SRNA's competing with residents for cases include Duke, Wake Forest, Alabama, USC, Georgetown, Iowa, Mayo, Columbia, Pittsburgh, and Baylor. Be careful and keep your eyes open out on the interview trail.
And here I get into trouble...but, at least in our institution, working in the same hospitals with SRNA/CRNAs is a small step toward learning how to get along, since both types of providers are here to stay (if my 34 years of experience (both as a CRNA and an MD attending) mean anything).
Please don't start any flame wars about that last part. I won't get sucked into that. It is pointless.
Being an attending at one of the above named programs, I can assure you that, if the program is big enough, as ours is, you don't have to worry about competing for cases and whether you will get a quality education. Our grads have many times more cases and more regional experience than any program. Plus the benefits of relief and such, as stated above.
And here I get into trouble...but, at least in our institution, working in the same hospitals with SRNA/CRNAs is a small step toward learning how to get along, since both types of providers are here to stay (if my 34 years of experience (both as a CRNA and an MD attending) mean anything).
Please don't start any flame wars about that last part. I won't get sucked into that. It is pointless.
personally i would avoid them...but you can go ask the residents in the program how it works. nurse students are in my experience, very aggressive with demanding the cases. definitely try and get a feel for how things are prioritized. i've def heard complaints that nurses will get preference in case mix.
personally i would avoid them...but you can go ask the residents in the program how it works. nurse students are in my experience, very aggressive with demanding the cases. definitely try and get a feel for how things are prioritized. i've def heard complaints that nurses will get preference in case mix.
I can only speak to my program but we train SRNAs and there has NEVER been a day since Ive been here where an SRNA got a good case that should have gone to a resident who was otherwise not involved in his/her own good case. Very occasionally there are just not as many residents available to do good cases (AAA, Whipple, etc.) and CRNAs will do them, but I dont see it at the expense of resident education. We train too many SRNAs, I think, but if anything, they support the education of residents (keeping us out of the eye room, ortho trash, belly case, occasional spine, etc) providing breaks, helping out with preops and what not.
Just two ways of looking at it. I think it would be a lot harder task for the residents and the programs to handle the work that we do without the extenders but I know that Ive said that elsewhere.
Northwestern in chicago also has a SRNA program. Some of the residents I spoke to complained about them.
There are pluses to having CRNAs because they can relieve you for lunch, breaks, and late days. Plus, they can take the less educational cases on the schedule.
However, I would strongly advise against going to a program that has a nurse anesthesia school (i.e. SRNAs), because then you have to compete with them for cases. After all, they have educational requirements to fill as well.
Programs that have SRNA's competing with residents for cases include Duke, Wake Forest, Alabama, USC, Georgetown, Iowa, Mayo, Columbia, Pittsburgh, and Baylor. Be careful and keep your eyes open out on the interview trail.
as a ca-1 you they make you look good because you can progress faster than them, your worker more, doing harder cases, etc.. so you look good compared to them..
My program, we did a lot of bs cases, trauma washouts, simple ortho. eyes, etc, etc. We worked, suposedly according to a reviewer, neat the 95+% of cases per resident in the nation. We had a couple crnas around to help with the load and they never came in late to get us out. We had no srnas. IT WAS WORTH EVERY 7 PM WASHOUT, EVERY MIDNIGHT LAP CHOLE, EVERY KNEE SCOPE TO NOT TRAIN OR SUPPORT THE MILITANT CRNA BS. If you want to be lazy and have a cush residency....you're no different than the jerks who came before us that thought supervising 4-6 crnas at once was a great idea. If youre a competitive med student send the message to the chairmans who train the CRNAs that you will not be part of it.
Wow. Now we've started to attack each other. You can go ahead and count me in the *lazy* group of residents that appreciate relief from my B.S. case from a CRNA. I'm so f'in lazy, I squeezed a chicken-fingers-and-bag-o-chips lunch into the extra five minutes of room turnover today while I waited for the circulator to lay out instruments. As I drained a Coke, a CRNA asked me if I needed a lunch break. I said no. In my mind, I was thinking, "My break starts in about 10 minutes once I slide the LMA into this pt. for a knee scope."
Wow. Now we've started to attack each other. You can go ahead and count me in the *lazy* group of residents that appreciate relief from my B.S. case from a CRNA. I'm so f'in lazy, I squeezed a chicken-fingers-and-bag-o-chips lunch into the extra five minutes of room turnover today while I waited for the circulator to lay out instruments. As I drained a Coke, a CRNA asked me if I needed a lunch break. I said no. In my mind, I was thinking, "My break starts in about 10 minutes once I slide the LMA into this pt. for a knee scope."
If you really feel strongly about ending all CRNA education, you should find a residency that doesn't have any CRNAs. Don't stop with residency. Limit your job search to MD-only practice. Embrace that 3 a.m. appy when you're 55 years old. You'll be doing it.
If you happen to have CRNAs at your program currently, stop accepting breaks from them. Petition your PD to eliminate CRNAs from the call pool. Residents only. Push the 80 hr week to its limit now, before the ACGME cuts it back next year. Hell, stay in the OR until your chairman drags you out kicking and screaming, stinking because you haven't showered in 3 days, because the showers they have for residents are shared by CRNAS, and bygod, you won't share shit with those hacks.
There's too much damn hyperbole on these boards recently. Whatever the future may hold for anesthesia, I hope it gets here soon. That way we can all just lie down and take it, instead of talking about it.
And yes, I voted for Obama. Along with most of the country. Sarah Palin disgusts me. I might regret my decision if McCain outlives Obama's term.
Please teach me the ways of getting free time during room turnover. 😕 Seriously I'm busting my ass and always the last one ready.
So it would be OK for a 55-yr old CRNA to get up at 3am and do that lap appy but not you (assuming you were 55)? I am confused.
If anyone is wondering why nurses are taking over anestheisa, they just need to look at this thread.
You guys are happy to let nurses to take the cases so you can "study' and "relax", and then you complain that CNRAs are taking your jobs...You guys are giving the specialty away!
Next time, when you are relived by SRNA/CRNA, please look at the other side of curtain. Your surgerical colleages is staying, even for the BS cases. This is why they have at least a feasible future while you are fighting with CRNAs to survive.

If anyone is wondering why nurses are taking over anestheisa, they just need to look at this thread.
You guys are happy to let nurses to take the cases so you can "study' and "relax", and then you complain that CRNAs are taking your jobs...You are giving the specialty away!
Next time, when you are relived by SRNA/CRNA, please look at the other side of curtain. Your surgical colleages are staying, even for the BS cases. This is why they have at least a feasible future while you are fighting with CRNAs to survive.
And yes, I voted for Obama. Along with most of the country. Sarah Palin disgusts me. I might regret my decision if McCain outlives Obama's term.
If anyone is wondering why nurses are taking over anestheisa, they just need to look at this thread.
You guys are happy to let nurses to take the cases so you can "study' and "relax", and then you complain that CRNAs are taking your jobs...You are giving the specialty away!
Next time, when you are relived by SRNA/CRNA, please look at the other side of curtain. Your surgical colleages are staying, even for the BS cases. This is why they have at least a feasible future while you are fighting with CRNAs to survive.
If anyone is wondering why nurses are taking over anestheisa, they just need to look at this thread.
You guys are happy to let nurses to take the cases so you can "study' and "relax", and then you complain that CRNAs are taking your jobs...You are giving the specialty away!
Next time, when you are relived by SRNA/CRNA, please look at the other side of curtain. Your surgical colleages are staying, even for the BS cases. This is why they have at least a feasible future while you are fighting with CRNAs to survive.