| Literature DB >> 25653494 |
Woon-Seok Roh1, Duk-Kyung Kim2, Young-Hun Jeon3, Seong-Hyop Kim4, Seung-Cheol Lee5, Young-Kwon Ko6, Yong-Cheol Lee7, Gyu-Hong Lee2.
Abstract
Using the Korean Society of Anesthesiologists database of anesthesia-related medical disputes (July 2009-June 2014), causative mechanisms and injury patterns were analyzed. In total, 105 cases were analyzed. Most patients were aged < 60 yr (82.9%) and were classified as American Society of Anesthesiologists physical status ≤ II (90.5%). In 42.9% of all cases, the injuries were determined to be 'avoidable' if the appropriate standard of care had been applied. Sedation was the sec most common type of anesthesia (37.1% of all cases), following by general anesthesia. Most sedation cases (27/39, 69.2%) showed a common lack of vigilance: no pre-procedural testing (82.1%), absence of anesthesia record (89.7%), and non-use of intra-procedural monitoring (15.4%). Most sedation (92.3%) was provided simultaneously by the non-anesthesiologists who performed the procedures. After the resulting injuries were grouped into four categories (temporary, permanent/minor, permanent/major, and death), their causative mechanisms were analyzed in cases with permanent injuries (n=20) and death (n=82). A 'respiratory events' was the leading causative mechanism (56/102, 54.9%). Of these, the most common specific mechanism was hypoxia secondary to airway obstruction or respiratory depression (n=31). The sec most common damaging event was a 'cardiovascular events' (26/102, 25.5%), in which myocardial infarction was the most common specific mechanism (n=12). Our database analysis demonstrated several typical injury profiles (a lack of vigilance in seemingly safe procedures or sedation, non-compliance with the airway management guidelines, and the prevalence of myocardial infarction) and can be helpful to improve patient safety.Entities:
Keywords: Adverse Effects; Injuries; Legislation; Malpractice
Mesh:
Year: 2015 PMID: 25653494 PMCID: PMC4310949 DOI: 10.3346/jkms.2015.30.2.207
Source DB: PubMed Journal: J Korean Med Sci ISSN: 1011-8934 Impact factor: 2.153
General characteristics of the cases
Values are expressed as number of cases or median (interquartile range). Appropriateness of anesthesia care was graded on a 1-9 point scale (1=totally avoidable injury, 9=totally unavoidable injury, if an appropriate standard of care had been used). ASA, American Society of Anesthesiologists; GA, general anesthesia; SP, spinal anesthesia; ED, epidural anesthesia; PNB, peripheral nerve block; LA, local anesthesia.
Analysis of cases by anesthetic technique
Values are expressed as numbers of cases. For the purpose of analysis, epidural anesthesia, spinal anesthesia and peripheral nerve block were grouped under 'regional anesthesia (RA)'. Intraoperative monitoring: grade I, no monitoring; grade II, pulse oximetry only; grade III, grade II plus non-invasive blood pressure measurement and/or electrocardiography; grade IV, grade III plus capnography. Appropriateness of anesthesia care was graded on a 1-9 point scale with 1-3 for 'avoidable', 4-6 for 'possibly avoidable', and 7-9 for 'probably unavoidable'. GA, general anesthesia; LA, local anesthesia.
Fig. 1Analysis of the sedation cases (n = 39) by sedative drug used.
Analysis of the complications (permanent injuries and death) by damaging events
Values are expressed as number (%) of cases. Of total 11 damaging event categories, there is no case eligible for four categories (equipment problems, renal events, endocrine events, and others).
Fig. 2Analysis of all cases (n = 105) by the clinical specialties involved. OS, orthopedics; PS, plastic surgery; GS, general surgery; IM, internal medicine; OB & GY, obstetrics and gynecology; GP, general physician.