1 / 16

Obstetrics as a unique anesthetizing environment

Obstetrics as a unique anesthetizing environment. Tom Archer, MD, MBA Director, OB anesthesia UCSD. Learning objectives. Why is OB a unique environment for us, the anesthesiologist? How should we the obstetrician? How should the obstetrician treat us?.

greg
Télécharger la présentation

Obstetrics as a unique anesthetizing environment

An Image/Link below is provided (as is) to download presentation Download Policy: Content on the Website is provided to you AS IS for your information and personal use and may not be sold / licensed / shared on other websites without getting consent from its author. Content is provided to you AS IS for your information and personal use only. Download presentation by click this link. While downloading, if for some reason you are not able to download a presentation, the publisher may have deleted the file from their server. During download, if you can't get a presentation, the file might be deleted by the publisher.

E N D

Presentation Transcript


  1. Obstetrics as a unique anesthetizing environment Tom Archer, MD, MBA Director, OB anesthesia UCSD

  2. Learning objectives • Why is OB a unique environment for us, the anesthesiologist? • How should we the obstetrician? • How should the obstetrician treat us?

  3. Obstetrics– a unique environment for the anesthesiologist • A happy, “normal” event, unlike other “surgery”. • Patients are usually in pain when we meet them. • Most patients want to be awake for the birth (the “procedure”). • Lots of family around (and in OR).

  4. Cesarean delivery-- a unique psychosocial surgery

  5. C-section – a unique psychosocial surgery • Unique surgery, happy event gone awry. • Strike a balance between “happy event” and “risky surgery”. • Most patients are awake– and want to be. • Team approach (patient, family, nursing, OB, anesthesia) • Support person present in OR. • Need for utmost discretion about medical info– JW, drug use, abortions, etc.

  6. How should we treat the OB? • “Private practice approach”: we are all here to take excellent, efficient and profitable care of the patient. • Availability • Responsiveness • “Management by walking around” • Proactive (when they call for strip review in Room #7, we go in too).

  7. How should we behave on OB? Our antennae need to be out. Don’t wait to be called!

  8. Anticipate and be available • Know every patient on the floor. Introduce yourself early. • Be accessible to OBs and nurses. • Get informed early about potential problems (airway, obesity, coagulopathy JW, congenital heart disease) • Remember the basics (IV access, airway)

  9. Anticipate and be available • We need a certain knowledge of OB to know what is going to happen. Try to think one or two steps ahead. • “Placenta isn’t out yet in room 7” • “The lady in 6 has a pretty bad tear.” • “Strip review in 3, please.” • “We can’t get an IV on the lady in 4.” • “Can you give us a whiff of anesthesia in 8? We don’t need much.”

  10. Good interpersonal relations are part of good medicine • Eager to meet, greet and evaluate the new patients when they first come in. • Good patient care • Good human relations • Good business • Listens well and respectfully answers patient questions. • Proactive approach to problems (obesity, fear, bleeding, coagulopathy, hx of anesthesia problems). • A doctor who, by the way, gives anesthesia (another medical resource, not just a needle jockey).

  11. What we like from the obstetrician • Get us involved early! • If we have the right attitude, we will never be upset with your getting us involved early! • Morbid obesity • Asthma • Anesthesia fears, Hx of problems • Any significant medical problem

  12. What we like from the obstetrician • Treat us like an consultant, not a technician. • We have our own, valid point of view and concerns. • Just like you, we want the best outcome for mother and child.

  13. What we like from you, the obstetrician • Tell us what has happened with the patient and what you need to do– don’t tell us what anesthetic to give. • For you to dictate the anesthetic clouds the picture (and makes us defensive).

  14. What we like from you, the obstetrician • For example, say: “The patient has a retained placenta and the uterus appears to have contracted down around it, so we need to relax the uterine muscle and manually take out the placenta.” • This could be achieved with GA or IV analgesia plus nitroglycerin. • Don’t say, “This patient needs a spinal so I can get the placenta out.” • Spinal will not relax uterine muscle.

  15. Tell us what is going on with the patient and what you need to do. • Let us design the anesthetic plan to give you and the patient the conditions that you need. • That’s our job!

  16. The End

More Related