Quick Qtn re ASA Class

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nvshelat

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Quick question about ASA Class from an MSI - can you specialize in "high risk" patient anesthes.? Is this what the CC fellowship is for? If so, then do you have to have a CC fellowship in order to treat the highest risk pts?

Thanks!
 
To a large extent who takes care of sicker patients depends on where you practice. If you work exclusively in an outpatient surgery center or an office based-practice you are unlikely to see anyone sicker than an ASA III. (Most ambulatory surgery centers turf these cases elsewhere.) Some community hospitals do not offer surgery for cardiac, neuro, trauma, thoracic, etc. (You will, however, see an ASA IV patient present for a total hip replacement or colon resection in this environment.)

Critical Care Fellowship is for people who genuinely love managing a critically ill patient in the ICU environment. (Many of us non-intensivists admire their work but cannot personally stomach working in the ICU environment.) Anesthesia-trained intensivists in academic settings often have subspeciality interests that steer their OR time towards the care of trauma, cardiac, transplant, thoracic, neuro, and other potentially complex patients. One does not, however, need critical care training to do these cases in most locations. Finally, any general anesthesiologist in a hospital with an ICU should be able to manage an ICU patient who comes to the OR for routine procedures (Trach, Exp Lap, Burn Care, etc.)
 
Quick question about ASA Class from an MSI - can you specialize in "high risk" patient anesthes.? Is this what the CC fellowship is for? If so, then do you have to have a CC fellowship in order to treat the highest risk pts?

Thanks!

Great question! A residency in anesthesia is geared toward training ALL anesthesiologists to take care of most anesthetics - perhaps the exception is NICU/pediatric hearts - but anesthesiologists are trained to do everything else.

CC fellowhips, then, is really so an anesthesiologist can get extra training so they can work a lot harder for less pay than a general anesthesiologist.
 
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