This crap right here is hilarious. Especially the comment about this being a theatrical specialty? What does that even mean?
A @dhb, who pushes the stretchers in Europe?
I do have to agree with everything you say tho.
When I am in the ICU, I totally am the queen bee. I just ask the nurses what I would like and it gets done. Somehow I don’t get the pushback that I sometimes get with CRNAs
It’s so different than the OR. And I push no stretchers. And see outside through the window next to my office or in the patients‘ rooms.
This field would be different, be viewed different, and be treated different, if however many years ago when we started this supervision nonsense we said 'no thanks', and anesthesiologists supported by the ASA decided the anesthesia should be delivered by either a physician or a midlevel, but not both. The decision to supervise was a decision to empower CRNAs and 'give' the OR to them. It's been downhill since, and the ship won't right itself until anesthesiologists make the hard decisions necessary to do it themselves. That's not to say we won't have jobs in supervision. I imagine we will, but they'll continue to be lackluster jobs and professionally unfilling jobs (primarily, and especially, in private practice). I guess I should say here that this is all my opinion?
There's a stark difference between a group of MD only anesthesiologists and a group of supervising anesthesiologists. In skill, in pride, in joy, and in respect through the ORs and the hospital. Does that mean it's so for every single anesthesiologist everywhere? No, of course not, but broad general strokes can be made.
Medical students and residents can and should learn that the ASA has done itself, and especially anesthesiologists, no favor by embracing supervision, terms like physician anesthesiologist, and anesthesiologist as leader of a 'team'. Team implies groupwork, roles, and acceptance of those roles. That's not the case in an anesthesia team, despite how many times we tell ourselves it's the case. Sorry, but no.