Whoa - you're friggin kidding me, right? You think it's acceptable for an anesthesia provider to LEAVE THE ROOM in the middle of a case and let the circulator watch the monitors? Yet you have a problem with having different providers during the case? Tell me the name of this hospital so I can make sure I NEVER have surgery there. Oh, and BTW - this would qualify as insurance/medicare fraud. And since you're aware of it, you're just as guilty.
A 45-second pee break is very common on extremely long cases and the bathroom is 15 feet away. A stable patient, railroad tracks if you will, left alone for 45 seconds. I'm not saying that things don't go wrong, but it would probably go wrong anyway whether they are there or not.
Seriously, medicare fraud. That is pure hyperbole and does not contribute to a rational discussion.
I'm sure you've never seen a perfectly healthy gallbladder or appendix come out. I'm sure you have never started an A-line, IV or central line that maybe you didn't really need.
Lets not even talk about ASA grading.
Oh, that patient is really a 3 ASA with only mild hypertension. You are really coming off as high and mighty and as someone who has never done anything, even if it was for the good of the patient, that may be in a gray area.
No, I still don't have a problem with them taking a 45 second pee break. I was under the impression that nurses did monitoring on local and sedation cases, right? Is this supposed to be a threat or am I supposed to be scared? Lets have a rational discussion about the real world. I must say that I am very surprised at you. I have always known you to be rational and honestly, I can't think of a single one of your posts I have ever disagreed with and I've certainly never seen you act this way.
I would rather they take the pee break and monitor the patient while they are in the room, check the urine output and give a damn about the patient.
What I said was not an attack on mid-level anesthesia and I feel like you are taking it that away. I specifically said that those folks with experience can put me to sleep anytime. In fact, several of my good friends are CRNAs.
My entire point was about experience. I happened to pick on the new CRNAs, because they are exactly that, new. The older CRNAs are a joy to work with and there are MDs that don't check UO, don't pay attention, etc.
Five or six providers during an 8 hr case might be a little unusual, but not unreasonable. Hell, we have surgeons swap out on 8 hr cases, ESPECIALLY neuro. It's far preferable for someone to get a break than be sitting in a case for hours on end. Getting a fresh perspective from another provider is often helpful as well - that person giving the break may catch something that the other person hasn't noticed, or maybe even something you haven't noticed, since you apparently can't keep your own mind on your part of the procedure.
Fair enough, I had not considered it from that perspective.
I still am uncomfortable with that many different people behind the drapes. 2 or 3 I can see >4 worries me.
As far as keeping my mind on the procedure that is really not any of your business. In fact, that is what my boss has asked me to do so that he can pay more attention to what is going on in the operation. I know I should have blinders on, according to you. However, in the past I have caught airway leaks, people contaminating the field (including anesthesia), have caught when medicatiosn that we ask anesthesia to give have not been given, when a circulator has put an incorrect medication on the field, when instruments are not properly sterilized, etc, etc. Some of those things could have caused serious harm to patients.
Are you telling me that you are NOT paying attention to what is going on in the sterile field. We are all supposed to work as a team. I learned how to multitask a long time ago and am pretty successful.
And while we're at it - why is the neuro PA helping with inductions? Clearly not what you need to be doing. Are you a control freak or what? Isn't there enough neuro stuff for you to concentrate on without worrying about the anesthesia part of it as wel? Or is your anesthesia group really that bad?