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- Attending Physician
when medically directing 2 to 4 rooms?
Is there specific people assigned to give breaks other than the attending of the rooms?
Which part of the country are you in if you don’t mind.
A piece of kitkat bar.What’s a break?
East coast. The directing physician does not give breaks or lunches, as it makes one not immediately available for the other rooms. Breaks and lunches are provided by other CRNAs or physicians that have large gaps in schedule or are already done.
If u really want to interpret the letter of the Medicare medication direction law.This is correct. The Directing MD can not legally give breaks to CRNAs/AAs/Residents (unless only covering 1 room of course...)
Medical "supervision" with QZ billing on the other hand......wild wild west
That is 3 hours of breaks. How do you find time to do that? Are you present for induction of your rooms?Supervise 4 give 15 min morning and 30 min lunch as attending.
Technically attending giving breaks can lead to problems. It then ties you up and if there is an emergency in one of the other rooms you aren’t available. So technically this violates TEFRA. I do know however that it’s common practice. The CRNAs give each other breaks at my current and recent past work place.Depends who is running the board and who is paying the bills for anesthesia.
It’s ridiculous unless it’s a super high acuity case if u are covering 1:3 or less. The attending should be able to give their own breaks even with high fast turnover
But we know there are lazy attendings out there who just want to play candy crush and than complain they need to have carpal tunnel surgery and put the next 6 weeks on Paid medical leave outside their usual pto time or even sick time that is not deducted
Yeah this is way too much. Y’all need an extra CRNA for this. What if your other room has an emergency during all these 15 and 30 minute breaks?? And honestly 15 minute breaks should be had in between cases unless we are talking of very fast turnovers.Where I am, the attending is expected to give the breaks. 15 min morning, 30 min lunch, and 15 min afternoon break; even if 1:4 or even 1:3 while carrying the OB and airway pagers.
CRNAs will text you to ask about their breaks.
Was much easier when sat own cases. Make time during turnover.
Two rooms and 30 minutes breaks?? Doable. But you have to have someone else cover your other room in case of emergency. But people here are talking 4 15 minutes and 4 30 minutes breaks. Come on. CRNAs can break themselves on the 15 minutes in between cases. 4 30 minute breaks can really tie up a doc in a busy practice.If u really want to interpret the letter of the Medicare medication direction law.
U better be in the room for every extubation in addition to induction. Or else you don’t meet the requirements.
Let’s stop being lazy here folks. I only covered two rooms today. My crnas are good getting their own breaks and even lunches in between cases. But they do appreciate me even offering. I did give one crna lunch break. The other said she would finish the case at 130pm and take her own lunch.
The goal in my practice is to peel off and let docs go home. And as soon as lunches are close to being accounted for. Docs can go home early. We look stupid and lazy as heck if we try to leave before lunches are accounted for.
But some of my colleagues have to be medically directed themselves to give their crna lunch breaks because they are use to having free crnas give lunches breaks. But there are days we don’t really have anyone free to do it. It’s really a lack of accountability or hate to say it. Laziness. The latter is likely true.
Where is this stated legally? At my practice docs often give the breaks and sometimes lunches.This is correct. The Directing MD can not legally give breaks to CRNAs/AAs/Residents (unless only covering 1 room of course...)
Medical "supervision" with QZ billing on the other hand......wild wild west
When I directed, I was in the room for every extubation, as well as induction. It was rare, but not unheard of, for a colleague to tell the CRNA to go ahead and extubate, then meet them in PACU. This was usually if it came when the attending was placing a block or epidural. In general here, CRNAs should be able to break themselves, since they don't have to preop or consent the patient, do blocks or lines, and techs change circuits, wipe down machines, and can grab most equipment needed. Demanding breaks when they have 15-30 minutes of downtime between cases is lazy, unless it's a day with really long cases (redo backs), or ultra-fast turnovers (T&A, peds dental).If u really want to interpret the letter of the Medicare medication direction law.
U better be in the room for every extubation in addition to induction. Or else you don’t meet the requirements.
CRNAs. We have 2-3 CRNAs who are here just to give breaks. They do 7-3 shifts and they give morning, lunch and afternoon breaks
Yeah this is way too much. Y’all need an extra CRNA for this. What if your other room has an emergency during all these 15 and 30 minute breaks?? And honestly 15 minute breaks should be had in between cases unless we are talking of very fast turnovers.
We physicians also need to stop being martyrs. Surgeons have plenty of time to eat and yet we sacrifice ourselves without any lunch breaks and think this makes us special? Nah. It makes us pushovers. People need to eat. Why does everyone expect anesthesiologists get to eat in the OR?? This is one of the things I respect about nurses. They insist on their breaks.You are correct. They use the excuse that we are short staffed and everyone is working. But even when we were fully staffed, the CRNA expectations were the same.
I find it funny because attendings and day docs doing solo cases get no expectation of a break or a lunch.
I use to work 7am-5pm in the EP lab with zero downtime, lunch or breaks. Maybe a 30 second washroom break between cases tops. Those rooms are now exclusively staffed by locums.
I'm even semi-ok with 1:4 if they are on the same floor and don't give breaks. But with doing all the pre-ops, and giving each room breaks and lunches, you are always moving with no downtime.
The bigger issue is what to do if another room has an emergency while breaking another CRNA? Call them back and run over? That could be 5-10 minutes later
We physicians also need to stop being martyrs. Surgeons have plenty of time to eat and yet we sacrifice ourselves without any lunch breaks and think this makes us special? Nah. It makes us pushovers. People need to eat. Why does everyone expect anesthesiologists get to eat in the OR?? This is one of the things I respect about nurses. They insist on their breaks.
To your second point. Better hope your partners are available to help in an emergency or the patient could die. And if your partners run to help it will be a blind situation as they know nothing of the patient but hopefully it’s something that can be fixed.
So, one meal a day??? That’s it??Just skip breakfast and you have compulsory intermittent fasting. That is why we all look so good! 😉
Good for the docs that go sit in the lounge to try and get some food. We all need food.Hospital (Medical Direction 1:3) - CRNAs do the breaks during daylight hours. I have given a handful of very fast "I'm about to pee my pants" breaks for the CRNAs as long as I have nothing imminent.
ASC (Solo Docs) - Docs grab a snack/pee break between cases and keep the room rolling. Most of us keep it moving quickly (i.e. consent pt, do any blocks, pee, scarf down a few crackers all before room is turned over). There are a couple that will drop off in pacu/phase II, see their next, then go sit in lounge sitting coffee until they get called to the room for the 2nd time. Miraculously they speed up if they know they are next on the list to get relieved for the day.
It's definitely a regional mentality. In the Midwest at two jobs I had, attending gave breaks as long as they reasonably could (usually less than 1:3). East Coast it's anathema to give breaks even if you have two incredibly slow rooms.East coast. The directing physician does not give breaks or lunches, as it makes one not immediately available for the other rooms. Breaks and lunches are provided by other CRNAs or physicians that have large gaps in schedule or are already done.
Yes... To a point. I'm talking they'll grab a coffee and snack... Do an EGD... Go grab another coffee and snack... Do a colonoscopy... Then another coffee and snack.Good for the docs that go sit in the lounge to try and get some food. We all need food.
Current place i do locums, one savvy Crna unless specifically directed will not take a break. The turnover is slow there, like hour plus. Also is clever enough to only ask for breaks during induction and emergence.People need breaks. Even 10 min breaks. The good crnas know how to break themselves. But there are quite a few who will play stupid or milk their in between times and claim they don’t have time to break themselves
We all got to work together in this. Unfortunately this isn’t the way the world works.
Put them in the longest room. That’s how you handle them.Current place i do locums, one savvy Crna unless specifically directed will not take a break. The turnover is slow there, like hour plus. Also is clever enough to only ask for breaks during induction and emergence.
And some of you complain that CRNAs don’t take orders. Well there is an opposite extreme to that.
That’s a lot it snacking. People are eating too much. I just need a good 30 minutes lunch break. Sometimes I work so much that it’s almost 2pm by the time I get to actually eat and hell at that point it’s going home time.Yes... To a point. I'm talking they'll grab a coffee and snack... Do an EGD... Go grab another coffee and snack... Do a colonoscopy... Then another coffee and snack.
Edit: it's used as a delay tactic so they don't have to relieve one of their partners in a different room.
Surgeons don’t like to pause in general and neither do the people running the rooms.For places where there is dedicated break staff, wouldn’t it be more cost effective to pause the room between cases for breaks and lunch?
Seems silly to me that we don’t pause between cases for lunch break.
I am not understanding your last comment. In any case why aren’t these CRNAs taking a break between cases if its this slow? That’s a bad culture. What are they doing for the entire hour? I mean even w ICU drop off in Timbuktu that’s gotta leave at least 30 minutes free.Current place i do locums, one savvy Crna unless specifically directed will not take a break. The turnover is slow there, like hour plus. Also is clever enough to only ask for breaks during induction and emergence.
And some of you complain that CRNAs don’t take orders. Well there is an opposite extreme to that.
Some of the neurosurgeons here will actually do total room break for lunch between cases. It wins them points with the OR staff, they can have a leisurely lunch and see a patient or two, and we know we don't have to get someone to break that CRNA. It's great.Surgeons don’t like to pause in general and neither do the people running the rooms.
Your question makes no sense. Do you mean in places where there AREN’T dedicated break staff why do people not pause? Because the other way is not computing to me.
You need a new job. This is horrific.Where I am, the attending is expected to give the breaks. 15 min morning, 30 min lunch, and 15 min afternoon break; even if 1:4 or even 1:3 while carrying the OB and airway pagers.
CRNAs will text you to ask about their breaks.
Was much easier when sat own cases. Make time during turnover.
You need a new job. This is horrific.
Sounds lovely. I worked in a po dunk hospital where one of the old timey eye surgeons did that. I was in shock!!! Shock!!Some of the neurosurgeons here will actually do total room break for lunch between cases. It wins them points with the OR staff, they can have a leisurely lunch and see a patient or two, and we know we don't have to get someone to break that CRNA. It's great.
What state is this?Outside of the county hospital (flush with anesthesia staff because of a great state pension), this is the norm for the jobs in the city I am in. The usual response I get from the heads of the different groups is...."who is gonna pay to have a CRNA around giving breaks, it's a ton of money for no service." Same reason they give to the hospitals for refusing to start up a preop clinic.
The crna won’t do anything unless specifically told to. Meaning the crna won’t take the initiative to go get lunch even if it’s a 2 hour case delay. You gotta specifically tell this person to go get lunch. The attitude is not terrible during cases. Doesn’t do anything that was not discussed previously.I am not understanding your last comment. In any case why aren’t these CRNAs taking a break between cases if it’s this slow? That’s a bad culture. What are they doing for the entire hour? I mean even w ICU drop off in Timbuktu that’s gotta leave at least 30 minutes free.
Get rid of the break staff. Save that salary money. I think it is cheaper to pause the room.Surgeons don’t like to pause in general and neither do the people running the rooms.
Your question makes no sense. Do you mean in places where there AREN’T dedicated break staff why do people not pause? Because the other way is not computing to me.