- Joined
- Nov 30, 2009
- Messages
- 34
- Reaction score
- 0
Any thoughts on what are some good habits and routines to efficiently go about starting, finishing, and turning over a case? I am interested in workflow patterns you may have found useful. Thanks!
Any thoughts on what are some good habits and routines to efficiently go about starting, finishing, and turning over a case? I am interested in workflow patterns you may have found useful. Thanks!
Any thoughts on what are some good habits and routines to efficiently go about starting, finishing, and turning over a case? I am interested in workflow patterns you may have found useful. Thanks!
I love having the mask strapped on.
Meh, let the CRNA worry about fast turnover. Just sign the damn chart; chances are you won't be doing your own cases anyway.
my 2 cents: sure it's always a good idea to be prepared and efficient... but after working in private practice for a few years now... working like a demon and trying to save a few minutes is just not worth it (obviously we're talking about elective cases w/ healthy pts). mistakes always tend to happen when we rush! besides, personally i feel it made me look mechanical and unpolished. i've come to appreciate establishing a welcoming atmosphere once the pt enters the or, ie chatting up (aka distracting) the patient... instills more confidence from surgeons/nurses rather than slapping that facemask on the second they lie down.
Any thoughts on what are some good habits and routines to efficiently go about starting, finishing, and turning over a case? I am interested in workflow patterns you may have found useful. Thanks!
I hate the strap, I think it freaks patients out. 🙂
We have good OR nurses though, whose sole job upon entering the room is to help us. I just have the OR nurse hold the mask in place.
I always hear people say this...I haven't yet found that to be true.
I always tell them before we go back - "The first thing I am going to do is strap a mask on - this fills your lungs and tissues with oxygen..." And I usually ask if they think they will be bothered by this. I haven't had anyone yet tell me that a mask on the face might bother them. I find versed a wonderful mask-tolerating drug. 🙂
They always try to tell me something through the mask. I always answer their questions with propofol.
They're telling you that mask strap is f*ng uncomfortable and bordering on torture.
You're "listening" with propofol.
Just use the tube holder metal bracket thing. If you know how to set the circuit tubing on it, the mask just gently rests on their face. Hands-free.
Just use the tube holder metal bracket thing. If you know how to set the circuit tubing on it, the mask just gently rests on their face. Hands-free.
They're telling you that mask strap is f*ng uncomfortable and bordering on torture.
You're "listening" with propofol.
Personally, I find that Mr. Propofol is great at answering questions. For awhile I used to take the mask off the patients' face if they were asking questions, but I've realized 3 things: 1) the vast majority of the time the question is something like "how long will the surgery last?" (newsflash, you should know this by now), 2) it slows me down, 3) they're just re-nitrogenating their lungs.
The key to efficiency is good help. I am incredibly spoiled. Obviously this is rarely the case in residency.
Our anesthesia techs get the room set to our preferences, so I can walk in and be ready to start the case in about 3 minutes of prep in the morning, same during the day between cases, although I spend most of those minutes during the prior case. When I get to the room all I have to do is a final check of the machine.
The patients have monitors placed in preop so all that is needed is to hook them up to the OR.
The patient enters the room, and from that point until patient is intubated I have the undivided attention of the circulating nurse and frequently another person. Because I work at a friendly hospital this second person is often the surgeon. I never would have dreamed of having the surgeon put on a moniter, start a second IV, set up the warmer during residency, but it is awesome.
The circulating nurse can hook the monitors up as I talk to the patient, and grab my preinduction drugs, and place the mask in the tube holder so it gently sits on their face. BP cuff first. "Deep, easy breaths" as BP cuff runs.
Time to fall asleep.
If I do an art line the techs have set up a tray exactly like I like it. If I do a central line they set up the tray ahead of time, and scrub in with me, handing me what I want when I want it.
The only downside of this set up is that your wife will start to wonder why you are so lazy and ask her to get you things that are on the counter right next to you.
Edit: I forgot to mention one thing I feel really adds to efficiency. Once you start a task, take the appropriate amount of time to do it right. Rush set up if needed, but never rush once the needle hits the skin. Time saved on performing a single attempt slowly is much greater than 2 or 3 attempts fast, and you look much better to patients and other staff.

Awesome.Edit: I forgot to mention one thing I feel really adds to efficiency. Once you start a task, take the appropriate amount of time to do it right. Rush set up if needed, but never rush once the needle hits the skin. Time saved on performing a single attempt slowly is much greater than 2 or 3 attempts fast, and you look much better to patients and other staff.
They're telling you that mask strap is f*ng uncomfortable and bordering on torture.
You're "listening" with propofol.
Tape the patients eyes shut in holding.





👍👍👍Just use the tube holder metal bracket thing. If you know how to set the circuit tubing on it, the mask just gently rests on their face. Hands-free.
Some efficiency observations I made during school:
One thing I was taught was to take a baseline BP measurement and start preoxygenating as soon as the patient enters the room, since these steps take some time to complete/cycle. While thats going, you put the other monitors on and by the time the BP is ready and the sat probe and EKG leads are on, it has been a few minutes on the Pre-O2. Of course, sicker or special needs patients might obviate doing it that way.
Another was right after induction, in the few minutes that usually exist between you being finished with your things and waiting for prep and drape to start, thats when you immediately set up airway and drugs for the next case.
I've heard people talk about mixing all of the induction drugs into one syringe too, but I've never tried that or seen anyone do that, so I'm weary.
One wakeup technique I've seen is to turn off the gas relatively early, go on 70/30 N2O/O2, and let the gas blow off with the nitrous keeping them asleep. Stimulation has to be low at this point or the patient will move. But it seemed like wakeups were pretty smooth.
One anesthesiologist who taught me a lot about efficiency in the OR had "Work in parallel, not in series" as his mantra. I find myself telling myself that when I'm setting up a room or doing almost any other task..
i
but for those who do practice by ventilating before pushing, this is the time i find a 2nd pair of hands most useful - just the physical pushing of the relaxant as im masking, i usually have to just stop masking and push it then remask no biggie .. better way?
:
Strapping the mask on is overkill, just like tying the patient's arms to the arm boards before induction. .
Yes, it's a fine line indeed, but in my opinion what impresses those around you (surgeons, nurses, etc) that you are "good" isn't nearly as much related to how fast you have someone asleep as much as how fast you have someone awake after a case.
Scrambling in a frantic mess at the beginning of a case may save you 1 or 2 minutes. Waking a patient up fast after a case can save you 10 minutes or more compared to your slower colleagues. Want to impresss the crowd? Wake your patients fast. This does mean turning off volatile agents as soon as you know case is winding down, and running the patient on something (N2O/oxygen for me) easily d/c'd at the end. I do this probably 15 minutes before drapes come down, but then I really know my regular surgeons' habits like the back of my hand. This doesn't work if you are a "sit down reader", this requires that I stand and watch the case progress like a hawk. And yes, occasionally this means a small bolus of proposal to give me a couple more minutes of anesthesia.
Still, nothing like the feeling of bringing a patient to the PACU 2-3 minutes after the case ends, surgeon still dictating, while the patient is asking "Is it over?".
THAT is a very good way to shine in the eyes of those around you.
id just say caution for awareness with the n20/o2 wakeup - you dont want 0.0%et inhalational for 15 minutes as unpleasant/scary things are still happening to the patient - maintain 0.2-0.3 mac inhalational
id just say caution for awareness with the n20/o2 wakeup - you dont want 0.0%et inhalational for 15 minutes as unpleasant/scary things are still happening to the patient - maintain 0.2-0.3 mac inhalational
Yes, it's a fine line indeed, but in my opinion what impresses those around you (surgeons, nurses, etc) that you are "good" isn't nearly as much related to how fast you have someone asleep as much as how fast you have someone awake after a case.
As for wake up...I'm a low flow Anesthesia girl myself. As long as I have a nice ventilator with no leaks and some fresh exorbant...I can wake up someone with .8-1 MAC on in no time!
I don't have any concerns with 70% nitrous and recall. Patients are usually not paralyzed at that point so they could always move if they experienced something unpleasant.
Fast wake ups will gain you a lot of time over a day.
However (and this isn't a personal attack on you) if you need multiple agents / nitrous / propofol boluses for a predictable wake up you are doing something wrong (except if you're using iso which i never have).
I've never used the nitrous technique or given propofol boluses with the intent of timing the wake up. The key IMHO is to get the patient in SV and titrate narcotics while dialing down the volatile. With that done wake up is just a formality.
Yeah but according to your other post you use des all the time. Long cases with sevo/iso are completely different.
There are many cases where you can't just get them breathing and titrate in the narcotics.
Meh, let the CRNA worry about fast turnover. Just sign the damn chart; chances are you won't be doing your own cases anyway.
yeah but there are things we can do like having all the preops done and any issues addressed before it is time to start the case
The key to efficiency is good help. I am incredibly spoiled. Obviously this is rarely the case in residency.
Our anesthesia techs get the room set to our preferences, so I can walk in and be ready to start the case in about 3 minutes of prep in the morning, same during the day between cases, although I spend most of those minutes during the prior case. When I get to the room all I have to do is a final check of the machine.
The patients have monitors placed in preop so all that is needed is to hook them up to the OR.
The patient enters the room, and from that point until patient is intubated I have the undivided attention of the circulating nurse and frequently another person. Because I work at a friendly hospital this second person is often the surgeon. I never would have dreamed of having the surgeon put on a moniter, start a second IV, set up the warmer during residency, but it is awesome.
The circulating nurse can hook the monitors up as I talk to the patient, and grab my preinduction drugs, and place the mask in the tube holder so it gently sits on their face. BP cuff first. "Deep, easy breaths" as BP cuff runs.
Time to fall asleep.
If I do an art line the techs have set up a tray exactly like I like it. If I do a central line they set up the tray ahead of time, and scrub in with me, handing me what I want when I want it.
The only downside of this set up is that your wife will start to wonder why you are so lazy and ask her to get you things that are on the counter right next to you.
Edit: I forgot to mention one thing I feel really adds to efficiency. Once you start a task, take the appropriate amount of time to do it right. Rush set up if needed, but never rush once the needle hits the skin. Time saved on performing a single attempt slowly is much greater than 2 or 3 attempts fast, and you look much better to patients and other staff.
And no, I don't routinely need to give propofol at the end of the case. Maybe once every 200-300 cases.
You are right to be worried about recall. That said, I haven't seen it. Moreover, I urge you residents to start checking patients in PACU if you have time. You'll be shocked to see that a patient will be awake and talking for a good 10 minutes before they lay down any real memories. Yet they are there talking to you (repeating themselves, because they don't recall already saying whatever profound thing it is they just said).