| Literature DB >> 34399681 |
Wenjun Koh1, Murali Chakravarthy2, Edgard Simon3, Raveenthiran Rasiah4, Somrat Charuluxananan5, Tae-Yop Kim6, Sophia T H Chew7, Anselm Bräuer8, Lian Kah Ti9,10.
Abstract
BACKGROUND: Anesthesia leads to impairments in central and peripheral thermoregulatory responses. Inadvertent perioperative hypothermia is hence a common perioperative complication, and is associated with coagulopathy, increased surgical site infection, delayed drug metabolism, prolonged recovery, and shivering. However, surveys across the world have shown poor compliance to perioperative temperature management guidelines. Therefore, we evaluated the prevalent practices and attitudes to perioperative temperature management in the Asia-Pacific region, and determined the individual and institutional factors that lead to noncompliance.Entities:
Keywords: Asia; Health knowledge, attitudes, practice; Hypothermia; Monitoring, intraoperative; Perioperative care; Practice guidelines as topic; Temperature
Mesh:
Year: 2021 PMID: 34399681 PMCID: PMC8365903 DOI: 10.1186/s12871-021-01414-6
Source DB: PubMed Journal: BMC Anesthesiol ISSN: 1471-2253 Impact factor: 2.217
Respondents & practice location characteristics
| Country of practice | India | 377 | 32.7% | ||
| Philippines | 342 | 29.6% | |||
| Singapore | 175 | 15.2% | |||
| Malaysia | 136 | 11.8% | |||
| Thailand | 91 | 7.9% | |||
| South Korea | 33 | 2.9% | |||
| Professional designation | Trainee or fellow | 328 | 28.4% | ||
| Specialist | 826 | 71.6% | |||
| Hospital type | Primary or Secondary Care | 93 | 8.1% | ||
| Tertiary Care | 600 | 52.0% | |||
| University Hospital | 226 | 19.6% | |||
| Private Hospital | 235 | 20.4% | |||
| Number of beds | Less than 250 beds | 288 | 25.0% | ||
| 251–500 beds | 253 | 21.9% | |||
| 501–1000 beds | 355 | 30.8% | |||
| More than 1000 beds | 258 | 22.4% | |||
| Number of operating theaters | Less than 5 | 221 | 19.2% | ||
| 5 to 10 | 325 | 28.2% | |||
| 11 to 20 | 370 | 32.1% | |||
| More than 20 | 238 | 20.6% | |||
| Number of patients anesthetized annually | Less than 1000 | 145 | 12.6% | ||
| 1001 to 10 000 | 495 | 42.9% | |||
| 10 001 to 20 000 | 286 | 24.8% | |||
| More than 20 000 | 228 | 19.8% | |||
| Locations where temperature measuring equipment is always available | Theater Reception / Induction Room | 593 | 51.4% | ||
| Operating Room | 1050 | 91.0% | |||
| Anesthesia Recovery Area | 783 | 67.9% | |||
| Locations where active warming devices are always available | Theater Reception / Induction Room | 521 | 45.1% | ||
| Operating Room | 979 | 84.8% | |||
| Anesthesia Recovery Area | 850 | 73.7% | |||
| Financially restricted in temperature management equipment | Never | Very rarely | Rarely 218 | 428 | 40.7% |
| Often 357 | Very often 128 | Always 139 | 624 | 59.3% | |
| Presence of hospital training courses | 281 | 26.7% | |||
| Presence of hospital standard operating procedure (SOP) | 228 | 21.7% | |||
n = 1154 for all variables unless otherwise stated
Respondents’ current practices on perioperative temperature management
| 531 | 46.0% | ||||
| 279 | 24.2% | ||||
| Perform prewarming for patients undergoing neuraxial anesthesia | 203 | 17.6% | |||
| Duration of prewarming ( | Less than 10 min | 148 | 44.8% | ||
| 10 to 20 min | 125 | 37.9% | |||
| 21 to 30 min | 36 | 10.9% | |||
| More than 30 min | 21 | 6.4% | |||
| Never | Very rarely | Rarely | 370 | 32.5% | |
| Often | Very often | Always | 767 | 67.5% | |
| Measure temperature during neuraxial anesthesia | Never | Very rarely | Rarely | 846 | 74.4% |
| Often | Very often | Always | 291 | 25.6% | |
| Frequency of intraoperative temperature measurement intraoperatively | Continuously | 678 | 80.4% | ||
| Every < 5 min | 23 | 2.7% | |||
| Every 5–10 min | 20 | 2.4% | |||
| Every 10–30 min | 50 | 5.9% | |||
| Every > 30 min | 72 | 8.5% | |||
| 508 | 44.0% | ||||
| Preferred mode(s) of intraoperative cutaneous warming (select all that apply) | Passive methods (e.g. Blankets) | 654 | 56.7% | ||
| Convection methods (e.g. forced air warmer) | 790 | 68.5% | |||
| Conduction methods (e.g. water mattress) | 296 | 25.6% | |||
| Radiation methods (e.g. infra-red warming devices) | 94 | 10.9% | |||
| Average temperature in operating rooms for adult surgery | Less than 21.0 °C | 425 | 36.8% | ||
| 21.0—23.0 °C | 488 | 42.3% | |||
| 23.1 to 24.0 °C | 143 | 12.4% | |||
| More than 24.0 °C | 98 | 8.5% | |||
| 953 | 82.6% | ||||
| Frequency of intraoperative temperature measurement postoperatively | Continuously | 83 | 18.7% | ||
| Every < 5 min | 18 | 4.1% | |||
| Every 5–10 min | 32 | 7.2% | |||
| Every 10–30 min | 82 | 18.5% | |||
| Every > 30 min | 228 | 51.5% | |||
| 486 | 42.1% | ||||
n = 1154 for all variables unless otherwise stated. Key perioperative temperature management principles are in bold
Fig. 1Respondents’ compliance to key principles of perioperative temperature management guidelines
Factors affecting compliance to intraoperative active warming
| Variable | Perform intraoperative active warming | Do not perform intraoperative active warming | Odds ratio | 95% C.I. for OR | ||
|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|
| Lower | Upper | |||||
| Active warming devices always available for use in the operating room | 492/508 (96.9%) | 487/646 (75.4%) | 10.040 | 5.915 | 17.041 | |
| “Rarely to never” financially restricted in temperature management equipment | 271/508 (53.3%) | 157/544 (28.9%) | 2.817 | 2.183 | 3.636 | |
| Presence of hospital training courses | 154/508 (30.3%) | 127/544 (23.3%) | 1.428 | 1.086 | 1.879 | |
| Presence of hospital standard operating procedure (SOP) | 139/508 (27.4%) | 89/544 (16.4%) | 1.926 | 1.427 | 2.598 | |
n = 1154 for all variables unless otherwise stated
Respondents’ perspectives on perioperative temperature management
| Survey question | Number | Proportion |
|---|---|---|
| I don't believe perioperative temperature monitoring is necessary for the majority of cases | 82 | 7.1% |
| I am limited by the availability of equipment for perioperative temperature monitoring | 396 | 34.3% |
| I do not believe prewarming is necessary for the majority of cases | 131 | 11.4% |
| I am limited by the availability of equipment for prewarming | 395 | 34.2% |
| There is not enough time to do prewarming | 364 | 31.5% |
| I do not believe intraoperative warming is necessary for the majority of the cases | 15 | 1.3% |
| I am limited by the availability of active warming equipment | 365 | 31.6% |
| I think active warming is not practical as it competes with surgical access | 43 | 3.7% |
| I think that forced air warmers may increase infection risk by blowing bacteria into the surgical wound | 61 | 5.3% |
| I don't believe postoperative warming is necessary for the majority of the cases | 27 | 2.3% |
| I am limited by the availability of equipment for postoperative warming | 387 | 33.5% |
| More temperature measurement devices | 577 | 50.0% |
| Better temperature measurement devices | 483 | 41.9% |
| More active warming devices | 729 | 63.2% |
| Better active warming devices | 542 | 47.0% |
| More education (materials, training) for staff | 845 | 73.2% |
| Renewing outdated educational materials | 374 | 32.4% |
| Implementation of an official hospital SOP | 752 | 65.2% |
| Better enforcement of existing hospital SOP | 393 | 34.1% |
n = 1154 for all variables unless otherwise stated. Question headings are in bold
Primary variables and participant characteristics grouped by number of operating theaters
| Variable | Number of operating theaters | Odds ratio | 95% C.I. for OR | |||||
|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|
| < 5 | 5–10 | 11–20 | > 20 | Lower | Upper | |||
| Measure temperature preoperatively | 90 (40.7%) | 142 (43.7%) | 181 (48.9%) | 118 (49.6%) | 1.141 | 1.018 | 1.279 | |
| Perform prewarming | 38 (17.2%) | 62 (19.1%) | 113 (30.5%) | 66 (27.7%) | 1.293 | 1.130 | 1.480 | |
| Measure temperature intraoperatively during general anesthesia | 94 (43.7%) | 174 (54.4%) | 303 (82.6%) | 196 (83.4%) | 2.130 | 1.856 | 2.444 | |
| Perform intraoperative active warming | 58 (26.2%) | 122 (37.5%) | 197 (53.2%) | 131 (55.0%) | 1.550 | 1.375 | 1.746 | |
| Measure temperature postoperatively | 194 (87.8%) | 255 (78.5%) | 295 (79.7%) | 209 (87.8%) | 0.828 | 1.017 | 0.876 | 1.180 |
| Perform postoperative active warming | 70 (31.7%) | 135 (42.5%) | 181 (48.9%) | 100 (42.0%) | 1.178 | 1.012 | 1.370 | |
| Active warming devices always available for use in the operating room | 147 (66.5%) | 269 (82.8%) | 348 (94.1%) | 215 (90.3%) | 1.999 | 1.679 | 2.380 | |
| Temperature measurement devices always available for use in the operating room | 184 (83.3%) | 294 (90.5%) | 351 (94.9%) | 221 (92.9%) | 1.516 | 1.236 | 1.860 | |
| “Rarely to never” financially restricted in temperature management equipment | 184 (83.3%) | 294 (90.5%) | 351 (94.9%) | 221 (92.9%) | 1.337 | 1.180 | 1.515 | |
| Presence of hospital training courses | 30 (16.3%) | 64 (22.3%) | 110 (31.1%) | 77 (33.9%) | 1.389 | 1.208 | 1.598 | |
| Presence of hospital standard operating procedure (SOP) | 23 (12.5%) | 59 (20.6%) | 88 (24.9%) | 58 (25.6%) | 1.292 | 1.113 | 1.499 | |
n = 1154 for all variables unless otherwise stated