The evolution and formalization of anesthesia assistant roles across Canada.
Homer YangJudith LittlefordBeverley A OrserMarco ZaccagniniHamed UmedalyMonica OlsenMateen RaaziKenneth LeDezJ Adam LawMitch GiffinJason FoersterBrandon D'SouzaIrfaan AliDerek DillaneChris ChristodoulouNatalie BuuRob BryanPublished in: Canadian journal of anaesthesia = Journal canadien d'anesthesie (2024)
This compilation of pan-Canadian AA data shows diverse models of practice and highlights the value to patients and the health care system as a whole of incorporating these allied professionals into the anesthesia care team (ACT). The present findings allow us to offer suggestions for consideration during discussions of retention, recruitment, program expansion, and cross-country collection of metrics and other data. We conclude by making six recommendations: 1. recognize that implementation of ACTs is a key element in solving the challenge of an increasing surgical backlog; 2. develop, or facilitate the development of, metrics and increase data-sharing nationally to enable health care authorities to better understand the importance of AAs in patient safety and perioperative efficiency; 3. develop and implement funding strategies to lower the barriers to AA training such as hospital-sponsored positions, ongoing salary support, and return-of-service arrangements; 4. ensure that salaries appropriately reflect the increased level of training and added levels of responsibility of certified AAs; 5. develop long-term strategies to ensure stable funding, recruitment and retention, and a better match between the number of AA training positions and the need for newly certified AAs; and 6. engage all stakeholders to acknowledge that AAs, as knowledgeable and specifically trained assistants, not only fulfill their defined clinical role but also contribute significantly to patient safety and clinical efficiency by assuming nondirect patient care tasks.
Keyphrases
- patient safety
- quality improvement
- healthcare
- electronic health record
- end stage renal disease
- big data
- primary care
- ejection fraction
- newly diagnosed
- virtual reality
- chronic kidney disease
- mental health
- palliative care
- machine learning
- prognostic factors
- cardiac surgery
- health information
- data analysis
- working memory
- adverse drug
- resistance training