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SPA Newsletter
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Volume 17 Number 3
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Summer 2004 Newsletter
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spa@societyhq.com
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Society for Pediatric Anesthesia Policy Statement on Provision of
Pediatric Anesthesia Care
The Society for Pediatric Anesthesia (SPA) has developed the following statement due to increasingly frequent requests for advice and support regarding the nature of personnel and facilities required to provide various levels of pediatric anesthesia services. These requests have been directed to pediatric anesthesiologists at tertiary care and pediatric hospitals, as well as the SPA and other organizations. The questions come from multiple sources, including practicing anesthesiologists, pediatricians, surgeons, and other physicians, hospitals and other health care facilities, and parents and other members of the lay public. In particular, it is apparent that many anesthesiologists and pediatricians in the community feel under some significant amount of pressure to undertake the perioperative care of pediatric patients who, based upon factors including age, planned surgery, and/or co-existing medical conditions, seem inappropriate in their practice setting. This pressure has come from hospital administrators, HMOs and third-party payers, surgeons, and at times other members of the anesthesiologist's practice group.
It is the position of its community and academic anesthesiologist members of the SPA that it is incumbent upon institutions and departments providing care for pediatric patients to prospectively establish what pediatric surgical and perioperative services the institution is capable of providing and define criteria for anesthesiologists' and surgeons' privileges. Furthermore, the members of the SPA maintain that there are certain aspects and types of pediatric anesthesia care, including perioperative care for infants and children with complex medical diseases and/or who are to undergo complex surgical procedures, that require unique skills and ongoing experience with such cases on the part of the anesthesiologist, as well as needing special resources within the institution.
The following statement is based upon deliberations of the Board of Directors and Executive Committee of the SPA, but also upon similar activities conducted by the California Society of Anesthesiologists (1), the Anesthesia and Pain Management Section of the American Academy of Pediatrics (2), a task force of the Committee on Pediatric Anesthesia of the American Society of Anesthesiologists (3), and a joint effort of the Anesthesia Patient Safety Foundation and the SPA, with the support of the ASA (4).
It is the position of the SPA that it is the duty and responsibility of local medical staffs to create and maintain appropriate policies and credentialing standards pertaining to the perioperative care of infants and children. The elements of this policy should include:
- Perioperative Environment
A written policy, that defines perioperative care for pediatric patients in the institution should be established by the medical staff. This policy should define the nature of perioperative care of pediatric patients that can be appropriately provided within the institution. Overall, the institutional resources and environment need to be able to fully support the care of the pediatric patient throughout the perioperative period. This policy should be based upon patient and clinical factors such as age, surgical procedure, and risk assessment (including both the planned surgery and co-existing medical conditions). Necessary personnel include anesthesiologists, surgeons, pediatricians, and nurses who have appropriate experience in the perioperative care of pediatric surgical patients, as well as other health professionals with sufficient pediatric experience and expertise such as radiologists, respiratory therapists, pharmacists, and child life specialists. The institution must have the medical equipment, and other services such as blood bank and laboratory services, appropriate to the care being undertaken. An established relationship for consultation, referral, and transport to a specialized pediatric center should also exist.
- Privileges
Anesthesia for pediatric patients can be provided directly or by direct and immediate supervision. The local medical staff, in conjunction with the facility's department of anesthesiology, should establish criteria for the anesthetic care of pediatric patients. The facility and its department of anesthesiology should maintain a quality assessment and improvement process for pediatric cases. The facility and its department of anesthesiology should define patient and risk categories that are at increased risk for anesthetic and perioperative complications. Such patients require care by anesthesiologists with special clinical privileges, experience, and training. The facility and its anesthesia department should define the level of experience, training, and continuing education required to care for pediatric patients in "Regular Clinical Privileges" and "Special Clinical Privileges" categories. Requirements regarding minimal volumes and types of pediatric cases in each of these categories should be determined by the facility's department of anesthesiology, and approved by the facility's medical staff and governing board.
- Regular Clinical Privileges
Extension of regular clinical privileges for pediatric anesthesia would be appropriate for anesthesiologists who are graduates of anesthesiology residence training programs that are accredited by the Accreditation Council for Graduate Medical Education or its equivalent. They should be board-eligible or board-certified in Anesthesiology. They should have documented current competence in the care of patients in this category in order to maintain these privileges.
- Special Clinical Privileges
The facility's department of anesthesiology is expected to designate categories of pediatric patients as being at increased risk for complications. Anesthesiologists caring for these patients should meet the requirements set forth above, and in addition should be credentialed by the department of anesthesiology for care in these increased risk categories. Graduation from an ACGME-accredited fellowship program in pediatric anesthesia, or its equivalent, is one criterion to be considered in the credentialing of anesthesiologists for "special clinical privileges for pediatric anesthesiology". With or without prior fellowship training, granting of "special clinical privileges for pediatric anesthesiology" should include demonstration of current clinical competence and expertise in the care of such patients, as determined by the facility's department of anesthesiology.
References
- CSA Policy on Pediatric Anesthesia. Bulletin of the California Society of Pediatric Anesthesiologists 2003; July-September, 33-35.
- Guidelines for the Pediatric Perioperative Environment. Pediatrics 1999;102:512-15.
- Pediatric Anesthesia Practice Recommendations. http://www.asahq.org/clinical/PediatricAnesthesia.pdf
- Safety in Pediatric Anesthesia. (APSF videotape)
Table of Contents
- Editor's Corner
- President's Message
- Society for Pediatric Anesthesia Policy Statment on Provision of Pediatric Anesthesia Care
- Williams Syndrome, Supravalvar Aortic Stenosis and Cardiac Arrest During Anesthesia
- Book Corner
- Out of Africa
- Peds Passport
- MHAUS Research Opportunities
- For Patients: Frequently Asked Questions
- Reviews & Commentary
- Bariatric surgery for severely overweight adolescents: concerns and recommendations.
Inge T, et al. Pediatrics 2004;114;217-223
- Conscious sedation of children with propofol is anything but conscious
Reeves ST, Havidich JE, and Tobin DP. Pediatrics 2004;114:e74-e76. URL http://www.pediatrics.org/cgi/content/ full/114/1/e74
- A factorial trial of six interventions for the prevention of postoperative nausea and vomiting.
Apfel CC, et al. N Engl J Med 2004; 50:2441-2451
- The effect of dexrazoxane of myocardial injury in dozorubicin-treated children with acute lymphoblastic leukemia
Lipshultz SE, et al. N Engl J Med 2004; 351:145-153
- Unilateral negative-pressure pulmonary edema in an infant during bronchoscopy
Shai Hannania, MD, et al. Pediatrics 2004;113:e501-e503. URL: http://www.pediatrics.org/cgi/content/full/113/5/e501
- Does pediatric surgical specialty training affect outcome after Ramstedt Pyloromyotomy? A population-based study.
Langer J, To T. Pediatrics 2004;113:1342-1347
- Overweight children and adolescents; A risk group for iron deficiency
Nead KG, et al. Pediatrics 2004;114:104-108
- A comparison of conservative and aggressive transfusion regimens in the perioperative management of sickle cell disease
Elliot P. Vichinsky, MD, et al and the Preoperative Transfusion in Sickle Cell Disease Study Group
- Cholecystectomy in sickle cell anemia patients: Perioperative outcome of 364 cases from the National Preoperative Transfusion Study
Charles M. Haberkern, et al, and the Preoperative Transfusion in Sickle Cell Disease Study Group
- Effect of hydroxyurea on the frequency of painful crises in sickle cell anemia
Samuel Charache, MD, et al
- Epidural Analgesia in the Management of Severe Vaso-Occlusive Sickle-Cell Crisis.
Yaster M, et al. Pediatrics 1994;93:310-315
- Literature Reviews
- A case of propofol toxicity: further evidence for a causal mechanism
Davinia E Withington, Mary K. Decell, Tareq Al Ayed. Pediatric Anesthesia 2004;14:505 Death after re-exposure to propofol in a 3-year-old child: a case report Josef Holzki, Christoph Aring, Alex Gillor. Paediatric Anaesthesia 2004;14:265
- Does anaesthesia harm the developing brain - evidence or speculation?
Andrew Davidson and Sulpicio Soriano. Paediatric Anaesthesia 2004; 14: 199-20.
- An evaluation of pediatric in-hospital advanced life support interventions using the pediatric Utstein guidelines: a review of 203 cardiorespiratory arrests.
J. Guay, L. Lortie.Can J Anesth 2004:51:4:373-378
- A factorial trial of six interventions for the prevention of postoperative nausea and vomiting
Christian C. Apfel, MD, et al. IMPACT Investigators. N Engl J Med 2004;350:2441-51
- Interactive Music Therapy as a Treatment for Preoperative Anxiety in Children: A Randomized Controlled Trial
Kain Z, Caldwell-Andrews A, Krivutza D, Weinberg M, Gaal D, Wang SM, Mayes L. Anesthesia & Analgesia 2004;98:1260-1266.
- Trends in the practice of parental presence during induction of anesthesia and the use of preoperative sedative premedication in the United States, 1995-2002: results of a follow-up national survey.
Kain, Z.N. et al. Anesth Analg 2004; 98:1252-9.
- Anesthetic Complications of Tympanostomy Tube Placement in Children.
Hoffmann KK, Thompson GK, Burke BL et al. Arch Otolaryngol Head Neck Surg. 128:1040-1043, 2002
- Neurobehavioral Implications of Habitual Snoring in Children.
O'Brien CM, et al. Pediatrics 2004; 116:44-50
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