there are differences...

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VolatileAgent

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there are differences in the anesthetic between when a physician administers and directs it compared to when a crna is allowed to "go it alone" or is even just given a long leash. i've seen them firsthand. they make a difference. not all of them have been studied and quantified, and it would likely be incredibly difficult to do so. i'm not talking about m&m; i'm talking about normal day-to-day stuff.

most of what we do is a "black box" to most other services we consult and provide care for. it's incredible how little even the surgeon understands about what it is we do. many non-anesthesia providers think our field is like a light switch: easy to turn on and off. and, the great anesthesiologists make it look that way.

but, there are differences... and i've seen them. i admit they are anecdotal, but they make a difference. here are some i observed during my residency when i was in the (relatively uncommon) situation where i would either be working in the same environment (alternate site anesthesia) or take over a case from a crna.

(1) inappropriate ventilator settings for the patient. examples: the patient would be a small child who was getting way too much tidal volume, peep (via pop-off) with an lma while the patient was spontaneously breathing, and too much oxygen mixture in a patient who already had significant atelectasis. in one case, when i was getting a crna out for a lunch, i walked in the room to see the peak pressures near 40cmH2O. the patient's i:e ratio was 1:2.5 and they had a belly full of gas. i immediately switch the vent to pressure control, lowered the pressure setting to 32, and dropped the flow rate. i didn't lose any tidal volume, and there was no breath stacking. i explained what i'd done to the crna (who looked at me like i was speaking chinese), and then she laughed at me said "okay, professor", clearly a back-handed compliment.

(2) poor pain-control planning strategy. either patients would get an unnecessarily high amount of narcotic, or they'd get no narcotic at all. the dose of the narcotic intended would not meet the post-operative requirements. for example, i once saw a routine gyny procedure where the patient got 20mg of morphine. the case was an hour-and-a-half. the patient was going home that same day. and there was no anticipation of significant post-operative pain. when i asked the crna why so much morphine, she told me that she always gives that much. 😱 toradol would've been a much better choice.

(3) poor drug choice/inappropriate drug administration. i took over an ankle case one time in a patient who was having a distal tibia hardware revision for infection and non-union. the patient was a smoking diabetic who'd had a regional block. the crna had given 8mg of decadron for PONV prophylaxis. this was a low-risk PONV case, and there was no need to give decadron.

(4) "cookie-cutter" anesthesia. the "one size fits all" anesthetic approach is often seen. patients get unnecessary anesthetic interventions because "this is the way i do a case" mentality. for instance, a patient who doesn't need to get tubed and paralyzed gets tubed and paralyzed. everyone gets reversed at the end of the case, even if they've been spontaneously breathing for the last two hours and pulling adequate tidal volumes. in another case, sometimes too simplistic of an anesthetic is offered. i was sent to the mri scanner to "get a crna out" when he was getting ready to start an mr case for a two-year-old. his plan was to just give propofol sedation. the kid had a history of puking (had puked that morning) and they were doing a full head, thorax, and abdomen scan that was going to possibly take upwards of four hours and require breath holding for certain portions. needless to say we tubed the kid and gave him vapors as well as full PONV prophylaxis. and that's not mentioning the fact that the purely sevoflurane anesthetic i gave him was about 1/4th the cost of a propofol infusion.

(5) inappropriate fluid administration for the case. chf patients not getting enough volume. simple procedures without a lot of surgical exposure getting too much. formulaic calculations followed religiously. i once saw a patient get repeatedly bolused because not enough urine was coming back from the foley. the patient was in low lithotomy with soft trendelenburg, and happened to have a twist in the foley line. needless to say, the patient "dumped" a lot of very low spec grav looking urine when flattened out and tension was taken off the foley line.


these are the types of things that make me bristle when i hear some crnas claim that they deliver the "exact same" anesthetic in the OR that an anesthesiologist does.


still, i admit these patients all wake up. they all go to the pacu. they will go back to their hospital rooms and/or go home. does it always matter? some might say "no" if they were to focus on m&m as the yardstick. but, we're talking about patient's impressions about their procedure. we're talking about occult changes that may show-up later that other primary clinicians taking care of the patient may not understand or be able to connect the dots back to the anesthetic. it's more than just how the patient "feels" afterwards, and often about subtle changes that cannot always be easily measured. and, some of the stuff we "do" to the patient may matter down the road and have a real impact on their underlying disease process (eg, tight peri-operative glucose control, appropriate intra-op fluid and pulmonary management, etc.).

i've seen some crna's who get this and understand the impact their interventions may have on more "physician knowledge base" level. but, they are few and far between - definitely the exception and not the rule. this has led me to the real, visceral understanding that to blanketly allow crna's - all crnas - to practice without supervision is a timebomb.

we've made such great advances in our field that monitors are better and we have a better understanding of what's happening when it happens intra-operatively. what we need a better understanding of is what subtle things we do, that make physiologic sense, to the patient affects them post-operatively. many of this know this already. you don't use a hammer when a screwdriver would work better. and, if the only tool a crna has is a hammer, then every problem looks like a nail. iow, let's not try to fix what's not broken. let's continue to advance our field and put a finer focus on the things we do and the potential impact they have down the road... things that are not always immediately obvious when you only take a patient from the pre-op area to the OR and then to the pacu, never seeing them again.
 
there are differences in the anesthetic between when a physician administers and directs it compared to when a crna is allowed to "go it alone" or is even just given a long leash. i've seen them firsthand. they make a difference. not all of them have been studied and quantified, and it would likely be incredibly difficult to do so. i'm not talking about m&m; i'm talking about normal day-to-day stuff.

most of what we do is a "black box" to most other services we consult and provide care for. it's incredible how little even the surgeon understands about what it is we do. many non-anesthesia providers think our field is like a light switch: easy to turn on and off. and, the great anesthesiologists make it look that way.

but, there are differences... and i've seen them. i admit they are anecdotal, but they make a difference. here are some i observed during my residency when i was in the (relatively uncommon) situation where i would either be working in the same environment (alternate site anesthesia) or take over a case from a crna.

(1) inappropriate ventilator settings for the patient. examples: the patient would be a small child who was getting way too much tidal volume, peep (via pop-off) with an lma while the patient was spontaneously breathing, and too much oxygen mixture in a patient who already had significant atelectasis. in one case, when i was getting a crna out for a lunch, i walked in the room to see the peak pressures near 40cmH2O. the patient's i:e ratio was 1:2.5 and they had a belly full of gas. i immediately switch the vent to pressure control, lowered the pressure setting to 32, and dropped the flow rate. i didn't lose any tidal volume, and there was no breath stacking. i explained what i'd done to the crna (who looked at me like i was speaking chinese), and then she laughed at me said "okay, professor", clearly a back-handed compliment.

(2) poor pain-control planning strategy. either patients would get an unnecessarily high amount of narcotic, or they'd get no narcotic at all. the dose of the narcotic intended would not meet the post-operative requirements. for example, i once saw a routine gyny procedure where the patient got 20mg of morphine. the case was an hour-and-a-half. the patient was going home that same day. and there was no anticipation of significant post-operative pain. when i asked the crna why so much morphine, she told me that she always gives that much. 😱 toradol would've been a much better choice.

(3) poor drug choice/inappropriate drug administration. i took over an ankle case one time in a patient who was having a distal tibia hardware revision for infection and non-union. the patient was a smoking diabetic who'd had a regional block. the crna had given 8mg of decadron for PONV prophylaxis. this was a low-risk PONV case, and there was no need to give decadron.

(4) "cookie-cutter" anesthesia. the "one size fits all" anesthetic approach is often seen. patients get unnecessary anesthetic interventions because "this is the way i do a case" mentality. for instance, a patient who doesn't need to get tubed and paralyzed gets tubed and paralyzed. everyone gets reversed at the end of the case, even if they've been spontaneously breathing for the last two hours and pulling adequate tidal volumes. in another case, sometimes too simplistic of an anesthetic is offered. i was sent to the mri scanner to "get a crna out" when he was getting ready to start an mr case for a two-year-old. his plan was to just give propofol sedation. the kid had a history of puking (had puked that morning) and they were doing a full head, thorax, and abdomen scan that was going to possibly take upwards of four hours and require breath holding for certain portions. needless to say we tubed the kid and gave him vapors as well as full PONV prophylaxis. and that's not mentioning the fact that the purely sevoflurane anesthetic i gave him was about 1/4th the cost of a propofol infusion.

(5) inappropriate fluid administration for the case. chf patients not getting enough volume. simple procedures without a lot of surgical exposure getting too much. formulaic calculations followed religiously. i once saw a patient get repeatedly bolused because not enough urine was coming back from the foley. the patient was in low lithotomy with soft trendelenburg, and happened to have a twist in the foley line. needless to say, the patient "dumped" a lot of very low spec grav looking urine when flattened out and tension was taken off the foley line.


these are the types of things that make me bristle when i hear some crnas claim that they deliver the "exact same" anesthetic in the OR that an anesthesiologist does.


still, i admit these patients all wake up. they all go to the pacu. they will go back to their hospital rooms and/or go home. does it always matter? some might say "no" if they were to focus on m&m as the yardstick. but, we're talking about patient's impressions about their procedure. we're talking about occult changes that may show-up later that other primary clinicians taking care of the patient may not understand or be able to connect the dots back to the anesthetic. it's more than just how the patient "feels" afterwards, and often about subtle changes that cannot always be easily measured. and, some of the stuff we "do" to the patient may matter down the road and have a real impact on their underlying disease process (eg, tight peri-operative glucose control, appropriate intra-op fluid and pulmonary management, etc.).

i've seen some crna's who get this and understand the impact their interventions may have on more "physician knowledge base" level. but, they are few and far between - definitely the exception and not the rule. this has led me to the real, visceral understanding that to blanketly allow crna's - all crnas - to practice without supervision is a timebomb.

we've made such great advances in our field that monitors are better and we have a better understanding of what's happening when it happens intra-operatively. what we need a better understanding of is what subtle things we do, that make physiologic sense, to the patient affects them post-operatively. many of this know this already. you don't use a hammer when a screwdriver would work better. and, if the only tool a crna has is a hammer, then every problem looks like a nail. iow, let's not try to fix what's not broken. let's continue to advance our field and put a finer focus on the things we do and the potential impact they have down the road... things that are not always immediately obvious when you only take a patient from the pre-op area to the OR and then to the pacu, never seeing them again.


I agree with you 1000 percent.. The problem is that the human body tolerates a lot of mistakes and bad clinical decision.. for a perfectionist like me in terms of anesthetic.. it killed me to watch crnas practice the way they practiced and the way they think.. it killed me.. It is so flawed in so many ways.. But hey, they have the same outcomes.. BUt like i said, a human being can tolerate a lot... provided they are healthy before they die ..

i agree letting them loose on the public is a bad bad idea.
 
I agree with you 1000 percent.. The problem is that the human body tolerates a lot of mistakes and bad clinical decision.. for a perfectionist like me in terms of anesthetic.. it killed me to watch crnas practice the way they practiced and the way they think.. it killed me.. It is so flawed in so many ways.. But hey, they have the same outcomes.. BUt like i said, a human being can tolerate a lot... provided they are healthy before they die ..

i agree letting them loose on the public is a bad bad idea.


They are ALREADY "loose" on the public. What they need is STANDARDS for Solo practice. You won't put the genie back in the bottle but you can still influence policy. Your hard line rhetoric is not BACKED by our leadership or academic chairs. They continue to train and support the next generation of CRNA with DNAP.

Blade
 
They are ALREADY "loose" on the public. What they need is STANDARDS for Solo practice. You won't put the genie back in the bottle but you can still influence policy. Your hard line rhetoric is not BACKED by our leadership or academic chairs. They continue to train and support the next generation of CRNA with DNAP.

Blade

noody can force me to supervise crnas who as a lot are inferior clinicians
 
there are differences in the anesthetic between when a physician administers and directs it compared to when a crna is allowed to "go it alone" or is even just given a long leash. i've seen them firsthand. they make a difference. not all of them have been studied and quantified, and it would likely be incredibly difficult to do so. i'm not talking about m&m; i'm talking about normal day-to-day stuff.

I was wary when I read the thread title.

But, great post. 👍
 
Be careful of a holier than though approach... while I generally agree with some of your statements there are more than one way to skin a cat... more than anything, we are afforded the luxury to try different things and learn from them during our residency... as opposed to telling the CRNA that you completely changed thier anesthetic... maybe ask them why they were running it that particular way... they may actually have ideas

As for a few criticisms you had... running PEEP with a spontaneously venitlating LMA in place is not contraindicated anywhere. From my clinical experience and from working with some of the "patriarchs/matriarchs of pediatric anesthesia" they always place about 4-5 of PEEP on an LMA to help prevent atelectasis in the youngins...

As to giving 20mg MSO4 for a two hour gyn case as opposed to toradol... I love toradol, but some of those "little gyn cases" turn into massive transfusions; I would be hesitant to give toradol till the end of a case (even though it is most effective prior to incision)... If I can keep a relatively healthy patient spontaneously ventilating; I'm going to push for a RR about 10 while titrating MSO4. Give them their triple shot of anti-emetics and wake them up beautifully on that narcotic/nitrous anesthetic.

Which brings me to the anti-emetics... granted the smoking/diabetic dude getting the ankle with regional... was there GA as well? h/o PONV? What was the f/s of the diabetic? Insulin/diet/oral med controlled? If relatively normal f/s and BP control... I love to give the decadron/V&E/Zofran combo. Altogether I spent about $3 and my patient won't blame anesthesia for filling like they're 21 and got home on a bender. As someone who has had PONV... I feel for those peeps.

Not trying to be attacking. I'm at a large program where I work with maybe 50 different attendings and the one thing I've learned is that there are 50 ways to do something (whether it be holding Tuohy, placing IV, taping ETT, taping eyes, putting the friggin side rales up on bed) but only one way is correct; the attending's way that day. As long as they explain why, I'm cool with it.
 
I have found clinicians of all stripes doing the things you mentio, you have good anesthesioplogists and bad. Good CRNA's and bad CRNA's. I am sorry your experiance has been so bad but seeing as we already practice independently and are not killing patients in droves your antecdotal evidence is just that, antecdotal. I could list incompetence and indifference by many anesthesiologists but choose not to because I am pretty sure that it is an exception not the rule.
Keep a littile perspective, after all 30 years ago many looked at anesthesol.ogists as the most incompetent of doctors, were they? I do not think so. Perhaps a few were but most were not, there were so many fewer anesthesiologists then that the incompetents made a much bigger impression.
You have a predisposition to dislike CRNA's, I have yet to see a single post that would describe them in any positive light, so I would have to say your judgment here is more then a little suspect. How about posting somthing useful for the students and residents. Somthing clinical, ranting they can get form thier instructors and attendings I am sure.
 
Keep a littile perspective, after all 30 years ago many looked at anesthesol.ogists as the most incompetent of doctors, were they? I do not think so. Perhaps a few were but most were not, there were so many fewer anesthesiologists then that the incompetents made a much bigger impression.

Really, I wasn't aware of this. How about some proof?🙄

[/QUOTE]You have a predisposition to dislike CRNA's, I have yet to see a single post that would describe them in any positive light, so I would have to say your judgment here is more then a little suspect. How about posting somthing useful for the students and residents. Somthing clinical, ranting they can get form thier instructors and attendings I am sure.[/QUOTE]

And the counter goes to you. Remember this IS a doctors forum.
 
there are differences in the anesthetic between when a physician administers and directs it compared to when a crna is allowed to "go it alone" or is even just given a long leash. i've seen them firsthand. they make a difference. not all of them have been studied and quantified, and it would likely be incredibly difficult to do so. i'm not talking about m&m; i'm talking about normal day-to-day stuff.

most of what we do is a "black box" to most other services we consult and provide care for. it's incredible how little even the surgeon understands about what it is we do. many non-anesthesia providers think our field is like a light switch: easy to turn on and off. and, the great anesthesiologists make it look that way.

but, there are differences... and i've seen them. i admit they are anecdotal, but they make a difference. here are some i observed during my residency when i was in the (relatively uncommon) situation where i would either be working in the same environment (alternate site anesthesia) or take over a case from a crna.

(1) inappropriate ventilator settings for the patient. examples: the patient would be a small child who was getting way too much tidal volume, peep (via pop-off) with an lma while the patient was spontaneously breathing, and too much oxygen mixture in a patient who already had significant atelectasis. in one case, when i was getting a crna out for a lunch, i walked in the room to see the peak pressures near 40cmH2O. the patient's i:e ratio was 1:2.5 and they had a belly full of gas. i immediately switch the vent to pressure control, lowered the pressure setting to 32, and dropped the flow rate. i didn't lose any tidal volume, and there was no breath stacking. i explained what i'd done to the crna (who looked at me like i was speaking chinese), and then she laughed at me said "okay, professor", clearly a back-handed compliment.

(2) poor pain-control planning strategy. either patients would get an unnecessarily high amount of narcotic, or they'd get no narcotic at all. the dose of the narcotic intended would not meet the post-operative requirements. for example, i once saw a routine gyny procedure where the patient got 20mg of morphine. the case was an hour-and-a-half. the patient was going home that same day. and there was no anticipation of significant post-operative pain. when i asked the crna why so much morphine, she told me that she always gives that much. 😱 toradol would've been a much better choice.

(3) poor drug choice/inappropriate drug administration. i took over an ankle case one time in a patient who was having a distal tibia hardware revision for infection and non-union. the patient was a smoking diabetic who'd had a regional block. the crna had given 8mg of decadron for PONV prophylaxis. this was a low-risk PONV case, and there was no need to give decadron.

(4) "cookie-cutter" anesthesia. the "one size fits all" anesthetic approach is often seen. patients get unnecessary anesthetic interventions because "this is the way i do a case" mentality. for instance, a patient who doesn't need to get tubed and paralyzed gets tubed and paralyzed. everyone gets reversed at the end of the case, even if they've been spontaneously breathing for the last two hours and pulling adequate tidal volumes. in another case, sometimes too simplistic of an anesthetic is offered. i was sent to the mri scanner to "get a crna out" when he was getting ready to start an mr case for a two-year-old. his plan was to just give propofol sedation. the kid had a history of puking (had puked that morning) and they were doing a full head, thorax, and abdomen scan that was going to possibly take upwards of four hours and require breath holding for certain portions. needless to say we tubed the kid and gave him vapors as well as full PONV prophylaxis. and that's not mentioning the fact that the purely sevoflurane anesthetic i gave him was about 1/4th the cost of a propofol infusion.

(5) inappropriate fluid administration for the case. chf patients not getting enough volume. simple procedures without a lot of surgical exposure getting too much. formulaic calculations followed religiously. i once saw a patient get repeatedly bolused because not enough urine was coming back from the foley. the patient was in low lithotomy with soft trendelenburg, and happened to have a twist in the foley line. needless to say, the patient "dumped" a lot of very low spec grav looking urine when flattened out and tension was taken off the foley line.


these are the types of things that make me bristle when i hear some crnas claim that they deliver the "exact same" anesthetic in the OR that an anesthesiologist does.


still, i admit these patients all wake up. they all go to the pacu. they will go back to their hospital rooms and/or go home. does it always matter? some might say "no" if they were to focus on m&m as the yardstick. but, we're talking about patient's impressions about their procedure. we're talking about occult changes that may show-up later that other primary clinicians taking care of the patient may not understand or be able to connect the dots back to the anesthetic. it's more than just how the patient "feels" afterwards, and often about subtle changes that cannot always be easily measured. and, some of the stuff we "do" to the patient may matter down the road and have a real impact on their underlying disease process (eg, tight peri-operative glucose control, appropriate intra-op fluid and pulmonary management, etc.).

i've seen some crna's who get this and understand the impact their interventions may have on more "physician knowledge base" level. but, they are few and far between - definitely the exception and not the rule. this has led me to the real, visceral understanding that to blanketly allow crna's - all crnas - to practice without supervision is a timebomb.

we've made such great advances in our field that monitors are better and we have a better understanding of what's happening when it happens intra-operatively. what we need a better understanding of is what subtle things we do, that make physiologic sense, to the patient affects them post-operatively. many of this know this already. you don't use a hammer when a screwdriver would work better. and, if the only tool a crna has is a hammer, then every problem looks like a nail. iow, let's not try to fix what's not broken. let's continue to advance our field and put a finer focus on the things we do and the potential impact they have down the road... things that are not always immediately obvious when you only take a patient from the pre-op area to the OR and then to the pacu, never seeing them again.

Interesting post. I promised to feedback on my experience spending the day at Henry Ford (main) Hospital in Detroit. It's known locally as a very good program and one that really works their residents hard (hours, not scut).

Granted, this arguement seems just as applicable to personality types, but to be fair, you can't "tweak" an anesthetic plan without having a very deep breadth of knowledge. That is, you need to know WHY you're taking the patient on a certain course versus another, regardless of personality type. So, naturally, this edge is hugely in favor of the physician provider.

So, I shadowed one of the chief residents at HF yesterday. Great guy, and very knowledeable. He addmited he was tired and it was "one of those days" for him, but he still did a GREAT job at instructing me as to what he was doing, and WHY he was doing it.

That's the biggest impression I was left with. How variable (and I've stated this before from previous shadowing experiences) an anesthetic approach can be. This guy had a REASON for everything he did. No joke. It was very cool, cause I brushed up on "Basics of Anesthesia" by Stotling and Miller the night before so that I could ask some semi-intelligent questions as well as to get a "bearing" on the field. (a bit premature as I've not had pharm yet, but hey....lol)

I also noted how subtle the differences in anesthetic approach could be to an outside observer. After all, the surgeons just seem to care about doing their procedures, and tend to take off even before emergence (in some cases). But, it's the PATIENT that benefits from having a provider with a very deep understanding of his/her peculiarities as pertain to their anesthetic regimine. This takes an understanding not only of the "hows", but most importantly the "whys". I'm not sure this can be overstated. Hell, even the patient's families are generally clueless, and if the patient came out yelling in pain, and puking all over the place, many would be like "well, I guess that's just the way it is... Poor Jim....". (o.k. a dramatic example, but you get the point.)

Like others have said, patients seem quite hardy in terms of what they CAN tolerate. But, that doesn't mean it's best for them, obviously. Anyway, I was with a guy that was always thinking ahead of the game.

I think that other physician professionals (namely surgeons) need to be educated as to how anesthesiologists can truly impact the recovery and EXPERIENCE of surgery (My limited experience is that they seem somewhat clueless as to the thinking going on behind the curtain..). This is important, and certain hypothetical examples might be used in some sort of lecture setting. In the case of elective (thus profitable) procedures, this would make sense.

My experience yesterday was great. I'm glad I was with someone that was open to answering all of my questions.
 
Speaking to many older surgeons that I work with and older doctors, My father in law, His cohort, my grandfathers cohort they felt that an anesthesiologist is a lower quality or inferior kind of doctor. My experience is quite the opposite. I have found most anesthesiologists to be extrordinarily competent providers of care as do most of the younger surgeons.
I find my reasoning in the earlier statment by 1) lack of the medical comunnity in anesthesia in general when anesthesia was in its infancy and
2. The preponderence of interest in surgery. The CRNA developed because of the lack nof interest in delivering anesthesia as a whole. Prior to its development anesthesia was often delegated to the most junior resident or experienced nurse available.
I am sorry that some are unhappy with my posts but I do not post that CRNA's are great and anesthesiologits just profit from the work they do.
I do not post statment that are disrespectful of a professional class. I merley answer charges laid at my doorstep.
This a forum for all allied healthcare prefessionals, says so in the front. There is a private forum in which these unfounded accusations of incompetence can be aired. If aired in public I will always answer in piblic, and a search of posts would reveal volitiles antipathy toward crna's
 
I have found clinicians of all stripes doing the things you mentio, you have good anesthesioplogists and bad. Good CRNA's and bad CRNA's. I am sorry your experiance has been so bad but seeing as we already practice independently and are not killing patients in droves your antecdotal evidence is just that, antecdotal. I could list incompetence and indifference by many anesthesiologists but choose not to because I am pretty sure that it is an exception not the rule.
Keep a littile perspective, after all 30 years ago many looked at anesthesol.ogists as the most incompetent of doctors, were they? I do not think so. Perhaps a few were but most were not, there were so many fewer anesthesiologists then that the incompetents made a much bigger impression.
You have a predisposition to dislike CRNA's, I have yet to see a single post that would describe them in any positive light, so I would have to say your judgment here is more then a little suspect. How about posting somthing useful for the students and residents. Somthing clinical, ranting they can get form thier instructors and attendings I am sure.

🙄
We need less nurses on this forum.
 
No just more respectful discussion

Stan,

With all due respect I doubt your colleagues would treat me well on www.allnurses.com

With guys like Zwerling promoting your profession at the expense of the truth and patient safety many Anesthesiologists are wary of the "two face" nature of CRNA's.

On YOUR profession's website most CRNA's openly support Zwerling and his testimony in front of the PA legislature. CRNA's making statements like his UNDER OATH that Anesthesiologists are not needed for the MOST DIFFICULT CASES IN OUR MAJOR MEDICAL CENTERS are BLATANT lies.

Your AANA and those that support those types off inflammatory lies are the ENEMY. Plain and Simple. If it was up to me I would go FULL METAL JACKET on the AANA and bury it once and for all. I would replace every CRNA that supports Zwerling and the AANA with a true midlevel provider who wants to work with us: the AA.

Fortunately for the AANA and most CRNA's my colleagues don't have the Ba@@# to join me in this battle- at least for now.

My hope is that a dozen more Zwerlings testify under oath and on video that Anesthesiologists "are not needed in the O.R. when a CRNA is present." The time has come to open more AA programs and graduate a thousand AA's per year. Please join the battle against the AANA in the private forum.

Blade
 
Here is something positive about CRNA's:

They work great under the supervision of a physician within the ACT model.

I have found clinicians of all stripes doing the things you mentio, you have good anesthesioplogists and bad. Good CRNA's and bad CRNA's. I am sorry your experiance has been so bad but seeing as we already practice independently and are not killing patients in droves your antecdotal evidence is just that, antecdotal. I could list incompetence and indifference by many anesthesiologists but choose not to because I am pretty sure that it is an exception not the rule.
Keep a littile perspective, after all 30 years ago many looked at anesthesol.ogists as the most incompetent of doctors, were they? I do not think so. Perhaps a few were but most were not, there were so many fewer anesthesiologists then that the incompetents made a much bigger impression.
You have a predisposition to dislike CRNA's, I have yet to see a single post that would describe them in any positive light, so I would have to say your judgment here is more then a little suspect. How about posting somthing useful for the students and residents. Somthing clinical, ranting they can get form thier instructors and attendings I am sure.
 
Here is something positive about CRNA's:

They work great under the supervision of a physician within the ACT model.


Some CRNA's need YEARS after school to do the job "well." Others only need 12-18 months. I have NEVER worked with a new graduate CRNA that could do all of anethesia well out of school. They simply aren't trained well enough.

The bottom 1/4 of CRNA's are extremely marginal providers. They are like having a new CA-1 Resident (no offence here) for life. You must watch them like a hawk and avoid giving them difficult cases (unless you have a LOT of time).

The 'spread' between the bottom 1/4 and the top 1/4 is absolutely amazing.
Again, all CRNA's are not equal- not even close. Their backgrounds, knowledge and training/school vary dramatically. Then, you combine that with a relatively easy exam with a 92% pass rate. Scary. All due to the AANA's political agenda and total disdain for patient safety.

Blade
 
Blade there is no enemy. This is not a war. There is no "full metal jacket".
I really have never encountered such an us against them mindset outside of this forum.
Look progress marches on. 30 years ago CABG was amazing and only the very best could do it. Now it is common and the very good can do it. More is known about there is a greater understanding of the risks and complications. All this means is that it can be done more safely by more people. Not stupid people just more good people. Ditto for computer programming and a host of other skills and professions. Anesthesia is immeasurably (well okay measurably) safer then it was 30 years ago. This is in a large part to the ASA and a decision it made to act proactive in the face of lawsuits to actively make anesthesia safer. Thus a multitude of new monitors and technologies. While making anesthesia safer it has put forth a large body of knowledge in an organized fashion concerning anesthesia care. This information can be taught to many and used by many. Is an AA a better provider then the CRNA, No not really, Are they worse, no I am sure that they are conscientious providers that do the best they can and that is very good.
Are anesthesiologists the enemy? No they have a different view of anesthesia and the role I play in it. Just as I have a different role. No more rhetoric please. The real world is here. If this is how the best and brightest of your profession is going to act then the public has no right to have confidence in it. Just as the day I announce that there is no need for anesthesiologists, describe them as the enemy use euphemisms of war, then the public will lose confidence in me.
 
The day when CRNA's said "we don't need Anesthesiologists" has already come.

You're a troll.

Blade there is no enemy. This is not a war. There is no "full metal jacket".
I really have never encountered such an us against them mindset outside of this forum.
Look progress marches on. 30 years ago CABG was amazing and only the very best could do it. Now it is common and the very good can do it. More is known about there is a greater understanding of the risks and complications. All this means is that it can be done more safely by more people. Not stupid people just more good people. Ditto for computer programming and a host of other skills and professions. Anesthesia is immeasurably (well okay measurably) safer then it was 30 years ago. This is in a large part to the ASA and a decision it made to act proactive in the face of lawsuits to actively make anesthesia safer. Thus a multitude of new monitors and technologies. While making anesthesia safer it has put forth a large body of knowledge in an organized fashion concerning anesthesia care. This information can be taught to many and used by many. Is an AA a better provider then the CRNA, No not really, Are they worse, no I am sure that they are conscientious providers that do the best they can and that is very good.
Are anesthesiologists the enemy? No they have a different view of anesthesia and the role I play in it. Just as I have a different role. No more rhetoric please. The real world is here. If this is how the best and brightest of your profession is going to act then the public has no right to have confidence in it. Just as the day I announce that there is no need for anesthesiologists, describe them as the enemy use euphemisms of war, then the public will lose confidence in me.
 
Insults are not the way to go Coastie. Trust me I am not going to loose any sleep over that. If we were in the room togeather I doubt you be so rude, bravado is easy on the internet as is loosing your manners
 
Stanley:

Regarding the day has come and your continued troll status:

A) It was the truth
B) Then don't lose any sleep
C) Try me!

Insults are not the way to go Coastie. Trust me I am not going to loose any sleep over that. If we were in the room togeather I doubt you be so rude, bravado is easy on the internet as is loosing your manners
 
Blade there is no enemy. This is not a war. There is no "full metal jacket".
I really have never encountered such an us against them mindset outside of this forum.
Look progress marches on. 30 years ago CABG was amazing and only the very best could do it. Now it is common and the very good can do it. More is known about there is a greater understanding of the risks and complications. All this means is that it can be done more safely by more people. Not stupid people just more good people. Ditto for computer programming and a host of other skills and professions. Anesthesia is immeasurably (well okay measurably) safer then it was 30 years ago. This is in a large part to the ASA and a decision it made to act proactive in the face of lawsuits to actively make anesthesia safer. Thus a multitude of new monitors and technologies. While making anesthesia safer it has put forth a large body of knowledge in an organized fashion concerning anesthesia care. This information can be taught to many and used by many. Is an AA a better provider then the CRNA, No not really, Are they worse, no I am sure that they are conscientious providers that do the best they can and that is very good.
Are anesthesiologists the enemy? No they have a different view of anesthesia and the role I play in it. Just as I have a different role. No more rhetoric please. The real world is here. If this is how the best and brightest of your profession is going to act then the public has no right to have confidence in it. Just as the day I announce that there is no need for anesthesiologists, describe them as the enemy use euphemisms of war, then the public will lose confidence in me.


No War? You must be delusional like Zwerling. Are you practicing Anesthesia solo? Yes. Do you have a Medical Degree and a Residency in Anesthesiology? No. Are you an Advanced Practice Nurse? Yes. Do you have more FORMAL education than an AA who CAN NOT practice Independently? No.

The war was started by the AANA is actively being waged by them. Zwerling's Video is proof and the AANA's web site is additional proof that CRNA's want through LEGISLATION what they did not earn through Education. This all politics and "back-door" maneuvering by the AANA.

Zwerling is a lier. I would debate him any time on the FACTS. Patients deserve better than some community college graduate with a 3.3 and an online degree. Then, local community based SRNA school? Finally, a 9th percentile score and that individual can practice Anesthesia without a BOARD CERTIFIED MD ANESTHESIOLOGIST? Scary and dangerous. My profession has allowed this to go on for way too long. The time has come to do what is right for the profession and the public.

The AANA is an evil organization that must be defeated. Its agenda of 100% Independence for EVERY CRNA is bad medicine. The AANA is so arrogant and deceitful that it doesn't even require EXPERIENCE or HIGH TEST SCORES to practice outside the ACT model. Patient safety comes LAST in the AANA's book.

The PUBLIC Should know about EVERY Anesthesia providers experience, back ground, credentials, certification, etc. CRNA's practicing SOLO will need to explain/justify that action to patients. Once EDUCATED the public will demand the BEST provider for their anesthetic.

I would support AA's practicing SOLO in BFE just like CRNA's do now. As long as the AA had 3 years of experience and 80th pecentile exam score with documented regional exposure. They can do everything as well as you without the attitude.

Blade
 
Blade there is no enemy. This is not a war. There is no "full metal jacket".
I really have never encountered such an us against them mindset outside of this forum.
Look progress marches on. 30 years ago CABG was amazing and only the very best could do it. Now it is common and the very good can do it. More is known about there is a greater understanding of the risks and complications. All this means is that it can be done more safely by more people. Not stupid people just more good people. Ditto for computer programming and a host of other skills and professions. Anesthesia is immeasurably (well okay measurably) safer then it was 30 years ago. This is in a large part to the ASA and a decision it made to act proactive in the face of lawsuits to actively make anesthesia safer. Thus a multitude of new monitors and technologies. While making anesthesia safer it has put forth a large body of knowledge in an organized fashion concerning anesthesia care. This information can be taught to many and used by many. Is an AA a better provider then the CRNA, No not really, Are they worse, no I am sure that they are conscientious providers that do the best they can and that is very good.
Are anesthesiologists the enemy? No they have a different view of anesthesia and the role I play in it. Just as I have a different role. No more rhetoric please. The real world is here. If this is how the best and brightest of your profession is going to act then the public has no right to have confidence in it. Just as the day I announce that there is no need for anesthesiologists, describe them as the enemy use euphemisms of war, then the public will lose confidence in me.

Stanley, with statements from Zwerling being what they are, as well as the overt political agenda of the AANA to TOTALLY marginalize the MD/DO providers, IT IS A WAR.

I realize that in PP most physicians and CRNAs get along well with a mutual respect for one another's place in the system. However, given that even SRNAs are required (by most programs) to contribute to the AANA (thus, AANA-PACs), it implicates each and every SRNA and CRNA that supports the AANA as a true enemy of sorts. It's not personal, as your party would likey TELL US. So, I'm happy to tell you the same. It's not personal, but we will fight for our interests in this profession.

And Blade makes a good point. It's obvious which party started all this nonsense in the first place.
 
I am sorry you feel I have an attitude. Have not been hostile toward you or your profession. Ultimately in my view we are all on the same side. To provide the best care possible to patients. The vast majority of students that become CRNA's already meet you requirements, and most work years before they go solo.
 
I am sorry you feel I have an attitude. Have not been hostile toward you or your profession. Ultimately in my view we are all on the same side. To provide the best care possible to patients. The vast majority of students that become CRNA's already meet you requirements, and most work years before they go solo.

:bullcrap::barf:
 
Anesthesia mortality is a hard concept to understand. The other day I had a C-section that bled and required a TAH. We lost 8 liters. The patients was appropriately resusciated with colloids, crystalloid, blood, factors, and electrolyte replacement. She was extubated the following morning and went home in less than a week. If her management was not as good she could have continued to bleed all night, get ARDS and die over a few days. If she died I don't believe anyone would consider it an anesthesia mortality (after all she bled 8L). Many times an adverse event occurs and if it is not managed right the outcome is poor but this morbidity is often attributed to other causes rather than less than ideal anesthetic management.
To fully understand the importance of anesthesiology and provider we will have to find some way to capture these ambigous and delayed morbidities.
 
I just graduated anesthesia residency and am doing fellowship for added experience and trying to get all the boards outta the way................I have very mixed opinions about CRNA's....some have taught me cool tricks and do great work...........some just should be left under GA for good............I guess you can argue there are good and bad anesthesiologists also...........but here's my tip the scales view.......
My brother runs an ICU practice as an intensivist and in his experience, everytime he gets a patient that was a case gone bad, it's a CRNA case by large. He personally has stated from his experience, no way a CRNA would touch him if he needed to go to OR.

Just one point of view I guess.

😕😕😕
 
Anesthesia mortality is a hard concept to understand. The other day I had a C-section that bled and required a TAH. We lost 8 liters. The patients was appropriately resusciated with colloids, crystalloid, blood, factors, and electrolyte replacement. She was extubated the following morning and went home in less than a week. If her management was not as good she could have continued to bleed all night, get ARDS and die over a few days. If she died I don't believe anyone would consider it an anesthesia mortality (after all she bled 8L). Many times an adverse event occurs and if it is not managed right the outcome is poor but this morbidity is often attributed to other causes rather than less than ideal anesthetic management.
To fully understand the importance of anesthesiology and provider we will have to find some way to capture these ambigous and delayed morbidities.

I see the same sort of thing all the time in my practice. A good Anesthesiologist saving a patient that would have otherwise suffered a major catastrophe. Clinton/Obama Medicine won't care about that if the DNAP can do it cheaper.

Blade
 
I am sorry you feel I have an attitude. Have not been hostile toward you or your profession. Ultimately in my view we are all on the same side. To provide the best care possible to patients. The vast majority of students that become CRNA's already meet you requirements, and most work years before they go solo.

This is NOT a personal attack on an individual CRNA. But, your organization is EVIL and must be defeated. CRNA's don't control or hire the VAST majority of Anesthesiology departments or providers. We do. A concerted effort by the ASA and Academic leadership to train/hire AA's instead of CRNA's would GO A VERY LONG WAY in solving the AANA problem.

Imagine, thousands of more AA's in the market place working in the ACT model. Then, let us see the AANA continue the War for Indepenence.

Blade
 
Every Resident needs to join the private forum and read the TRUTH about CRNA's. The Specialty of Anesthesiology is UNDER seige by the AANA and soon to be CRNA with DNAP. We are in the front lines of the war for Nursing Indepenence. The "marines" of Nursing, the AANA, will continue to hammer away at our field until all the legislatures declare it NURSING.

The time has come to rise up and join the fight to save the Specialty.
We need a DOZEN more AA programs to counter-balance the Nurses.
We need every able-bodied Resident to join the Private Forum.

Blade
 
Anesthesia mortality is a hard concept to understand. The other day I had a C-section that bled and required a TAH. We lost 8 liters. The patients was appropriately resusciated with colloids, crystalloid, blood, factors, and electrolyte replacement. She was extubated the following morning and went home in less than a week. If her management was not as good she could have continued to bleed all night, get ARDS and die over a few days. If she died I don't believe anyone would consider it an anesthesia mortality (after all she bled 8L). Many times an adverse event occurs and if it is not managed right the outcome is poor but this morbidity is often attributed to other causes rather than less than ideal anesthetic management.
To fully understand the importance of anesthesiology and provider we will have to find some way to capture these ambigous and delayed morbidities.

I dont know if this is a good example. This really isnt a challenge that a CRNA couldnt handle. I understand your point though....just pick another example. Its not like ALL my patients skate through without bleeding. Maybe cards or even a less than 1lb kid with a two chambered heart and one lung.....with hemophilia...in renal failure. Seriously though, a bleeder is not something too difficult to manage.
 
I dont know if this is a good example. This really isnt a challenge that a CRNA couldnt handle. I understand your point though....just pick another example. Its not like ALL my patients skate through without bleeding.

You take every post and comment PERSONALLY. Why don't you state some TRUTH for a change:

1. The Bottom 1/4 of CRNA's are MARGINAL and the AANA should NOT allow Independent Practice for such people

2. The VAST majority of new graduate CRNA's are NOT qualified to practice SOLO (outside the ACT model) without a few years of experience. The Public deserves this for added safety.

3. Zwerling is a lier. The ASA 4 patient is BEST handled by a Board Certified Anesthesiologist OR the ACT model. CRNA's are not the BEST Choice here.

I could go on with my list but since you won't admit to the FIRST three what is the point? The AANA's agenda is BAD MEDICINE!

Blade
 
I just graduated anesthesia residency and am doing fellowship for added experience and trying to get all the boards outta the way................I have very mixed opinions about CRNA's....some have taught me cool tricks and do great work...........some just should be left under GA for good............I guess you can argue there are good and bad anesthesiologists also...........but here's my tip the scales view.......
My brother runs an ICU practice as an intensivist and in his experience, everytime he gets a patient that was a case gone bad, it's a CRNA case by large. He personally has stated from his experience, no way a CRNA would touch him if he needed to go to OR.

Just one point of view I guess.

😕😕😕

You mean a CRNA independent...or working in the ACT model? CRNA's in the ACT model practice according to who is attending that day. So unless the CRNA was completely independent, those cases gone bad falls into the hands of the entire TEAM. Not saying that indy CRNA's are perfect and never have bad things happen. I just question the observation of your brother.
 
You take every post and comment PERSONALLY. Why don't you state some TRUTH for a change:

1. The Bottom 1/4 of CRNA's are MARGINAL and the AANA should NOT allow Independent Practice for such people

2. The VAST majority of new graduate CRNA's are NOT qualified to practice SOLO (outside the ACT model) without a few years of experience. The Public deserves this for added safety.

3. Zwerling is a lier. The ASA 4 patient is BEST handled by a Board Certified Anesthesiologist OR the ACT model. CRNA's are not the BEST Choice here.

I could go on with my list but since you won't admit to the FIRST three what is the point? The AANA's agenda is BAD MEDICINE!

Blade

You do have a good point on all three....I dont completely disagree with you. yes, I am stepping outside the box.
 
How many more years of the AANA B.S. are we going to take?
To have an inferior provider claim EQUALITY and State CRNA=MDA should be enough to mobilize the masses.

No. As long as the $$$$ keeps rolling in for everyone (academia makes a ton off SRNA's) the leadership is content to play DEFENSE only.

Unfortunately, the next generation (toughlife, etc.) is going to suffer the consequences of such INACTION. The best defense is a good offense.

PR campaign to really explain the DANGERS of Anesthesia and the LACK of FORMAL education by a CRNA

AA Programs. We need a dozen, no make that two dozen, more AA programs. Every Residency Program should have an AA school. The SRNA's can give breaks and do GI cases.

Blade
 
You do have a good point on all three....I dont completely disagree with you. yes, I am stepping outside the box.

Okay,

THen why don't the MAJORITY of dues paying AANA members support a REASONABLE platform? Why make ENEMIES of EVERY FUTURE ANESTHESIOLOGIST?

The fact is the AANA is biting the hand that feeds the VAST majority of its membership. Time to get a new dog.

Blade
 
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