| Literature DB >> 31368512 |
J Dooley1, R A Armstrong2, M Jepson1, Y Squire2, R J Hinchliffe3, R Mouton2.
Abstract
BACKGROUND: Although delivering a chosen mode of anaesthesia for certain emergency surgery procedures is potentially beneficial to patients, it is a complex intervention to evaluate. This qualitative study explored clinician and patient perspectives about mode of anaesthesia for emergency surgery.Entities:
Year: 2019 PMID: 31368512 PMCID: PMC6973173 DOI: 10.1002/bjs.11243
Source DB: PubMed Journal: Br J Surg ISSN: 0007-1323 Impact factor: 6.939
Clinician and patient characteristics
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| Anaesthetist | 21 |
| Surgeon | 21 |
| Nurse | 9 |
| Geriatrician | 2 |
| Interventional radiologist | 2 |
| Physician's assistant | 1 |
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| Hip fracture | 35 |
| Hernia | 21 |
| Emergency EVAR for rAAA | 21 |
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| Hip fracture | 10 |
| Hernia | 7 |
| Emergency EVAR for rAAA | 6 |
Some clinicians talked about more than one setting. EVAR, endovascular aneurysm repair; rAAA, ruptured abdominal aortic aneurysm.
Themes and subthemes from thematic analysis with example quotations
| Themes and subthemes | Example quotations |
|---|---|
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| Context and ‘best’ mode of anaesthesia |
There are a number of factors I take into consideration. There are patient factors. There are anaesthetist factors and team factors and surgeon factors (surgeon, vascular surgery, site 1) I'm assuming you're thinking that regional's going to be better for some patients? (anaesthetist, all settings, site 8) Presumably, it's thought of as beneficial because you're less affected by the anaesthesia when you have an epidural (patient having hip fracture surgery) |
| Balance in choosing mode of anaesthesia |
They have their general anaesthesia, [the BP] plummets down to 40 or 50 [mmHg] and you have to get the cross‐clamp over quickly. If they're awake, they don't have that. But, equally, if they're thrashing around in agony then it's a very difficult thing to do (surgeon, hip fracture surgery, site 4) I had a choice of having an epidural or general and I went, ‘No, you put me to sleep.’ [Regional anaesthesia] would be ideal for me because a general anaesthetic doesn't agree with me. I just always make sure I've got plenty of [sick] bowls next to me (patient having hip fracture surgery) |
| Change and development in anaesthesia |
Because we're better with our nerve blocks they are getting analgesia, whereas actually the best way to analgise them back then would have been to do a spinal (anaesthetist, hip fracture surgery, site 2) We've done a few more recently under local anaesthesia… there is emerging evidence that for ruptures, local anaesthesia gives a better outcome than general anaesthesia (interventional radiologist, EVAR, site 1) I didn't feel as bad this time with whatever they used as I have done before (patient having hernia repair) |
| Importance of mode of anaesthesia for outcomes in emergency surgery |
It's always really hard to filter out what's the effect of the surgery and what's the effect of the anaesthetic (anaesthetist, site 2) No one sat down and explained to me what they were actually going to do – you know, with the anaesthetic. That would've helped me feel a lot easier (patient having hernia repair) If I'd have had local anaesthetic then I might not have been as groggy. I know when I woke up I was all over the place (patient having hernia repair) |
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| Clinical autonomy and guidelines in anaesthesia |
It's a blessing and a curse in terms of it's good that we take every patient and every situation on its merits and make a decision. But I think it does lead to excess variation in practice sometimes (anaesthetist, all settings, site 7) We've issued guidance and recommendations, and had anaesthetists try to talk to anaesthetists, and other anaesthetists try to cajole anaesthetists, and even just have a majority view, and we failed (surgeon, hip fracture surgery, site 6) |
| Conforming to norms in mode of anaesthesia |
It is left to the discretion and the experience of the anaesthetist, but certainly the way things are done here it's more traditionally people are used to looking after people who have had a general anaesthetic (anaesthetist, all settings, site 2) [By using local anaesthesia] we managed to return [the patient] to a state where he was discharged from the hospital physiologically good about three or four days later. If he'd had an open triple‐A repair he would have been there for yonks, if he'd survived… [The surgeon] was very concerned even after having done the procedure that she was going to be hauled over the coals (anaesthetist, all settings, site 6) |
| Relationship between expertise, preference and patient involvement |
Perhaps it's the luck of the draw – who you get. It's a bit like a doctor. You get good ones and you get bad ones (patient having hip fracture surgery) I personally do ask patients what they prefer, but I also inform their decision… I can't force them to do one thing or another, but equally I can tell them what my experience is and what other people would do (anaesthetist, hip fracture surgery, site 1) They wanted to do it while I was awake with a local. But I said to them, ‘If you do that, then I will start passing out and fainting’… So, they gave me something that made me really woozy and that was okay (patient having EVAR) They said, ‘Oh, it may be a spinal.’ I said, ‘Oh, yes, I'd rather have that,’ but then when I spoke to the anaesthetist he advised a general. I said to him, ‘I've got a terrible phobia of it,’ and he said, ‘Oh, I wouldn't worry about that too much’ (patient having hip fracture surgery) |
| Team dynamics in emergency surgery |
So there's a whole team with a different ethos on different days (surgeon, site 1) Often, what the surgeon wants is different from the anaesthetist is willing to deliver (surgeon, hip fracture surgery, site 7) |
EVAR, endovascular aneurysm repair.
Figure 1Thematic map of themes and subthemes as identified from interviews
Figure 2Advantages and disadvantages of general and local/regional anaesthesia GA, general anaesthesia; LA/RA, local/regional anaesthesia.
Reported factors that affect clinicians' decision‐making about mode of anaesthesia
| No. of interviews ( | |
|---|---|
| Practical factors | 34 (61) |
| Norms and habits | 22 (39) |
| Surgical factors | 16 (29) |
| Time | 16 (29) |
| Clinician expertise | 44 (79) |
| Concern about converting to general anaesthesia | 13 (23) |
| Clinician preference | 34 (61) |
| Patient preference | 36 (64) |
Values in parentheses are percentages.