Is it standard to always have a back-up call person available for every surgical site that requires call coverage (OR and OB)? 😀 Or, do some small practices just have a primary doc and that's it (no back up dude available)? 


Is it standard to always have a back-up call person available for every surgical site that requires call coverage (OR and OB)? 😀 Or, do some small practices just have a primary doc and that's it (no back up dude available)?![]()
I personally know of a small department that fell apart for exactly this reason. Primary call person was in a multi hour OR case. The other three people were not available. So an elective labor epidural never got done. Administration mandated a 2nd call person be available. Two of the four people subsequently resigned. They were replaced after about 18 months of locums.
And you have got a high degree of liability protection.🙂
panetrain said:Thanks for your rapid responses. The call coverage I have in mind would be OB only. Is it unreasonable to assign only a first call (no back up guy) to a 24-48 hour relatively slow OB shift? Thanks.
Thanks for your rapid responses. The call coverage I have in mind would be OB only. Is it unreasonable to assign only a first call (no back up guy) to a 24-48 hour relatively slow OB shift? Thanks.😀
If you're trapped in the OR with a non OB case, you can probably be successfully sued for not placing an epidural. Maybe not in the case of an OB emergency.
You'll probably be done with the section in 30 min anyway, which is my institution's upper bound of the acceptable amount of time we can take to get to the hospital when we're on pager call in the first place (I think ACOG & ASA are deliberately silent on time-to-hospital issues).
wait, what?
If you are trapped in a non OB case with no back up available for several hours and a woman delivers w/o an epidural, etc, I wouldn't be surprised if you were sued. They come expecting pain relief, you didn't even try. I see a settlement there.
NO. Decision to incision. Not time from anesthesiologist responding to page to incision. Except VBACs. The word there is immediate
If you are trapped in a non OB case with no back up available for several hours and a woman delivers w/o an epidural, etc, I wouldn't be surprised if you were sued. They come expecting pain relief, you didn't even try. I see a settlement there.
That is correct. i was imprecise.
i thought actually that re: vbacs, the spirit of the guideline was interpreted to mean that the 30 minute guideline still was in play-meaning that an anesthesiologist/obgyn do not have to be in house during vbac.
Labor & Delivery Deck + non-OB cases in OR = 2 frontline anesthesia providers on call.
Example: you're on call and Dr. Takeallnight brings a belly case to the OR. 2 hours into the case with no end in sight, a laboring patient has a prolapsed cord necessitating a STAT c-section. There is no way your gen surg case is going to finish in time for the 30 minute rule, much less in time to actually save the baby. Some would argue that it could be defensible to leave the intubated, "train tracks" patient with the circulator RN and tend to the crashing C-section. Others would argue that the C-section can be done under local. No one would argue that this is an ideal set-up.
Example: you're on call again with Dr. Takeallnight and this time it is an epidural that needs to be placed. You decide (wisely) not to leave your intubated "train tracks" patient to do an epidural. The patient delivers without an epidural. End of story? Maybe. Unfortunately, said labor patient was the daughter/wife of a hospital board member/influential surgeon/local politician/you name it and they are now out for a pound of flesh - that pound of flesh would be yours.
I'm sure there are many practices out there that cover OB and non-OB cases with one call doc. I'm glad that I'm not in such a practice.
if junior can sue mom's obgyn for "wrongful life" as a result of failed sterisation, then people can sue for anything.
If you're trapped in the OR with a non OB case, you can probably be successfully sued for not placing an epidural. Maybe not in the case of an OB emergency.
Labor & Delivery Deck + non-OB cases in OR = 2 frontline anesthesia providers on call.
Example: you're on call and Dr. Takeallnight brings a belly case to the OR. 2 hours into the case with no end in sight, a laboring patient has a prolapsed cord necessitating a STAT c-section. There is no way your gen surg case is going to finish in time for the 30 minute rule, much less in time to actually save the baby. Some would argue that it could be defensible to leave the intubated, "train tracks" patient with the circulator RN and tend to the crashing C-section. Others would argue that the C-section can be done under local. No one would argue that this is an ideal set-up.
Example: you're on call again with Dr. Takeallnight and this time it is an epidural that needs to be placed. You decide (wisely) not to leave your intubated "train tracks" patient to do an epidural. The patient delivers without an epidural. End of story? Maybe. Unfortunately, said labor patient was the daughter/wife of a hospital board member/influential surgeon/local politician/you name it and they are now out for a pound of flesh - that pound of flesh would be yours.
I'm sure there are many practices out there that cover OB and non-OB cases with one call doc. I'm glad that I'm not in such a practice.
how are the two situations the same? if i ask you to perform a procedure on me and you do it wrong and i have a negative outcome and all these things are clear then shouldnt i expect recompense? im not saying thats what happened in the above but if it did happen that way, then it seems valid.
i do not expect to get sued for not being able to put in an epidural, for whatever reason. should I?