Anesthesia without scavening systems

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jwizle

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Hey guys,

I'm looking to hear what you all think. I'm starting a new gig at a outpatient plastics place that does not have a scavenging system and no anesthesia gas. The previous doc mixes remi and propofol in 1 syringe and apparently has done this for 10 years without issue. Thoughts ?
 
I’m not working in that place, so it isn’t a question I’ll need to answer.

What’s the IM dose of roc for a 80kg adult?
I’d be ok working at a surgicenter without sux. No IV—No surgery. Hence no need for IM roc. Should an IV fall out and subsequent laryngospasm and desire for IM roc—->the correct dose is ALL.
 
I work at a center like this. NBD, I just bring paralytics and reversals with me. Also McGrath, LMA, oral and nasal airways,ETTs. Emergency meds. This stuff is easily transportable in a small backpack. No need to make a big deal about it
 
I work at a center like this. NBD, I just bring paralytics and reversals with me. Also McGrath, LMA, oral and nasal airways,ETTs. Emergency meds. This stuff is easily transportable in a small backpack. No need to make a big deal about it
Or the facility can actually provide the proper equipment. NBD

Especially since they can afford it if plastic surgery.
 
When McGraths first came out, our hospital bought 3 for the ORs. They all disappeared within a month. We’ve only had stand mounted glidescopes since then.
They do tend to grow legs. That being said the McGrath is my personal one. Don’t think anyone at the hospital is missing some ETT, LMA sux and roc
 
Don’t make such a big deal about it! He’s just taking all the risk stealing from the hospital so the surgery center can save some money on supplies/meds. No big deal!
This is kind of getting out of hand. No one is talking about taking drugs that are used on a regular basis. I am basically carrying an “oh $hit bag of a few emergency drugs to be used in case of emergency. I have never actually needed to open the bag but it’s good to know it’s there. Almost everyone who works in an office based setting does the same….
 
This is kind of getting out of hand. No one is talking about taking drugs that are used on a regular basis. I am basically carrying an “oh $hit bag of a few emergency drugs to be used in case of emergency. I have never actually needed to open the bag but it’s good to know it’s there. Almost everyone who works in an office based setting does the same….
It is still blatant theft.
 
This is kind of getting out of hand. No one is talking about taking drugs that are used on a regular basis. I am basically carrying an “oh $hit bag of a few emergency drugs to be used in case of emergency. I have never actually needed to open the bag but it’s good to know it’s there. Almost everyone who works in an office based setting does the same….
That is why the facility needs to provide the supplies.
 
Don’t make such a big deal about it! He’s just taking all the risk stealing from the hospital so the surgery center can save some money on supplies/meds. No big deal!
Think you are under the impression of a well stocked surgicenter. Think more along the lines of a doctors office that has a monitor, oxygen tank, and and ambu bag. Cases are all prop sedation. Healthy patients. There is a med room somewhere but I don’t know what it has and when it was purchased. That’s why I prefer to bring my own airway equipment. Guess I shouldn’t have some peace of mind while taking care of patients. You guys are making a huge deal over a vial of sux, roc and suggamadex. It literally costs pennies and is used and wasted without regard in the hospital. Probably less cost than one minute of a locums doc.
 
This is kind of getting out of hand. No one is talking about taking drugs that are used on a regular basis. I am basically carrying an “oh $hit bag of a few emergency drugs to be used in case of emergency. I have never actually needed to open the bag but it’s good to know it’s there. Almost everyone who works in an office based setting does the same….

What about all the other docs that work at that center who don't steal and bring supplies with them? You are setting a bad precedent for everyone else and lowering standards by doing so.
 
What about all the other docs that work at that center who don't steal and bring supplies with them? You are setting a bad precedent for everyone else and lowering standards by doing so.
Most docs that I know of that do office based carry their own emergency drugs and airway equipment.
 
Think you are under the impression of a well stocked surgicenter. Think more along the lines of a doctors office that has a monitor, oxygen tank, and and ambu bag. Cases are all prop sedation. Healthy patients. There is a med room somewhere but I don’t know what it has and when it was purchased. That’s why I prefer to bring my own airway equipment. Guess I shouldn’t have some peace of mind while taking care of patients. You guys are making a huge deal over a vial of sux, roc and suggamadex. It literally costs pennies and is used and wasted without regard in the hospital. Probably less cost than one minute of a locums doc.
Theft is still theft.

If you want piece of mind, do the right (and legal) thing - have the facility have proper supplies. Or just purchase your own.

Also, are you bringing the hospital’s dantrolene with that vial of sux?
 
I’m fine with that.

My issue is your stealing equipment and medications (which have finite expirations times at room temp) from your employer and making it seem like No Big Deal.
Sometimes I also use the hospitals printer and fax. I have even been known to take some ginger ale from the patient fridge in recovery. What can I say, I like to live on the edge 🙄
 
Think you are under the impression of a well stocked surgicenter. Think more along the lines of a doctors office that has a monitor, oxygen tank, and and ambu bag. Cases are all prop sedation. Healthy patients. There is a med room somewhere but I don’t know what it has and when it was purchased. That’s why I prefer to bring my own airway equipment. Guess I shouldn’t have some peace of mind while taking care of patients. You guys are making a huge deal over a vial of sux, roc and suggamadex. It literally costs pennies and is used and wasted without regard in the hospital. Probably less cost than one minute of a locums doc.

Are you in private practice or are you an employee? Is this office based anesthesia location very lucrative? Why are you willing to bear liability so a plastic surgeon can have a few extra bucks in his bank account? No one is shedding a tear about the hospital being stolen from. The problem is this kind of behavior enables these surgicenters to cut corners. If these medications are pennies then the surgicenter should be perfectly fine maintaining an adequate supply. Keep a few vials in a code box somewhere.
 
Are you in private practice or are you an employee? Is this office based anesthesia location very lucrative? Why are you willing to bear liability so a plastic surgeon can have a few extra bucks in his bank account? No one is shedding a tear about the hospital being stolen from. The problem is this kind of behavior enables these surgicenters to cut corners. If these medications are pennies then the surgicenter should be perfectly fine maintaining an adequate supply. Keep a few vials in a code box somewhere.
Just per diem. Local, good rate. Pleasant people. Easy work. Why cause a stink when the solution is so simple? For the record, even if they have the drugs I need (they may, I never asked) I prefer to have them readily accessible in my bag than having to yell for some nurse to dust off a code cart while the patient is going south fast.
 
Think you are under the impression of a well stocked surgicenter. Think more along the lines of a doctors office that has a monitor, oxygen tank, and and ambu bag. Cases are all prop sedation. Healthy patients. There is a med room somewhere but I don’t know what it has and when it was purchased. That’s why I prefer to bring my own airway equipment. Guess I shouldn’t have some peace of mind while taking care of patients. You guys are making a huge deal over a vial of sux, roc and suggamadex. It literally costs pennies and is used and wasted without regard in the hospital. Probably less cost than one minute of a locums doc.
You risk getting fired from hospital if anyone finds out. Not worth it. There's someone at that hospital with no sense of humor and no tolerance who will relish burning you at the stake. They'll call the cops, the $ value of the stuff you swiped will be inflated (that 4x6 Tegaderm is probably $178) and next thing you know you're pleading out some felony because the DA was bored. Just don't.

Get on the internet and spend $200 and order the stuff for yourself, if subsidizing a substandard office-based-practice is what you want to do. (No judgment there; the cost/benefit analysis of doing so is a separate conversation.)

I have used henryschein.com in the past for things I wanted to take with me into the wilderness or on int'l travel to places with sketchy medical systems. They'll need a copy of your medical license for some things and any rx medications. So long as you don't want any scheduled drugs, it's easy.
 
Back to my original question, for those with experience mixing remi and propofol in one syringe... any tips ?


I squirt remi 1mg into a 100ml bottle of propofol. Run the propofol at 50-100mcg/kg/min. Give small dose (50mg) ketamine up front. Usually lower end of that range is adequate. Do it for intubated MEP/SSEP spine patients…often run phenylephrine infusion with it. Probably not what you’d do in an office setting.
 
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