I know, I know, if it dosent fit your personal opinions then it MUST be flawed eh?
you see, this is your problem. this has nothing to do with personal opinions or feelings or what i think, which is often what most nurses base their decisions on, and everything to do with
lack of data to support your statement: that it is
proven that there is no difference in crna's and anesthesiologists safety performance individually. hogwash. both the pine and silber studies were never designed to make such a distinction. futhermore, anesthesiologists are involved in over 90% of
all anesthetics administered on a daily basis. yet, you will spuriously hear that crna's give 65% of all anesthetics, which doesn't tell the whole story. so, it becomes very hard to discern ANYTHING meaningful at the margins, especially when you are dealing with such a small percentage of crna's who aren't directly supervised by an anesthesiologist and
none of whom aren't supervised by a doctor at all.
so, yes, the data supports that a team environment, with an anesthesiologist directing care, is superior. no one is arguing that. what you are then trying to conclude from that, based on limited data using a crappy study (pine) which only looked at bread-and-butter cases, is that crna's and anesthesiologists are equal and therefore should have equal access to independent practice, which neither study even remotely attempts to argue and, in fact, suggests the opposite (see beginning of this paragraph, and read that a few times until it sinks in). so, the reality is that the data you're touting actually supports continuing things
exactly the way are right now. it in
no way supports giving crna's independent practice rights.
furthermore, this does not speak to the nuance in giving an anesthetic. the "feel" one develops, using a broad, deep understanding of medicine and medical knowledge, that lends itself to giving a better anesthetic. i've taken over cases from seasoned crna's and seriously thought to myself "what the hell were they thinking?" not that they were doing anything "unsafe" and that the patient was going to have a bad outcome from the case; just that the anesthetic they were giving was cookie-cutter and unimaginative. so, the entire premise that the pine study (and silber, for that matter) is not even an appropriate yardstick to measure the differences between our superior medical training and your (what is essentially) protocol practices.
utsouthwestern: i'm all ears. the situation we have created is one of our own doing. contrary to what some people believe, the candidates i've seen on the interview trail this year, our future leaders, are not "slackers" looking for a cush lifestyle. they are people at the top of their class with stellar board scores and records of achievement. the future of our profession looks bright. i'm hoping that there is a growing activisim as these bright up-and-comers get into the field.
as far as contributing, i have the asapac record of contributions and i was disappointed to see how few people i knew were in there. we are not politically active because of a lot of the sentiment you see in posters like militarymd, the "
fend for yourself and f**k everyone else" mentality. he is representative of the types that are out there in private practice, and until we can get past that mentality and be more like the aana in our efforts to promote our profession, then we are going to suffer the slings and arrows of the "men's health" articles and other garbage that the media protrays about our profession.
the fact is, most people go to the hospital believing that a physician is giving them their anesthetic. most would be shocked to learn that this was not always the case 100% of the time. the problem is, there aren't enough of us out there right now to fill the demand if we were to start a publicity campaign about the dirty tricks the naughty nurses at the aana engage in. bottom line is that we need to increase our political presence and continue to lobby and advocate for ourselves at the state and national level. pretty soon there are going to be a plethora of crna's for not enough jobs, and then they'll start in-fighting. when that happens, this current "problem" we have will take care of itself.